http://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=951962
http://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=951962#c5
--- Comment #5 from David Medina
"openSUSE wouldn't overwrite it (bootx64.efi) if it exist before installation"
It didn't exist. On the AMD the installation was performed on a blank disk, so there was no previously efi partition. In that system, I have found that I need to have the bootx64.efi entry in case the bios doesn't want to boot the "distro's name" because I have changed the disk. Debian only creates a "debian" entry, so I always create the "boot" one before powering off and change the disk and that's it. Then it never fails. But I think this is not the point... On the Intel desktop, back again with Opensuse in legacy mode now, I have repeatedly permformed an EFI test installation on an external USB drive to see if opensuse could be installed on its hard drive, in EFI mode. Same (bad) result every time: I only can boot it with the help of refind. And it is not that the hardware can not boot EFI, I have run this kind of test, for example, with Fedora and Manjaro, and they booted fine. The screenshot I provided was of this test with Opensuse. On the AMD it's exactly the same but with the 4.2 kernel because last week I bought a new disk. I will privide that as well... Thanks, -- You are receiving this mail because: You are on the CC list for the bug.