![]() ![]() Nothing makes it possible to boot pure UEFI ISO's in Ventoy on my x250. UPDATE: Downgraded my BIOS till 1.27 (the 2017 version) and Ventoy down to 1.0.67. Will post an update on this if I succeed (hopefully). If someone tries to solve this issue just like I'm trying (will probably downgrade the BIOS eventually), my UEFI BIOS Version is N10ET63W (1.42), the UEFI BIOS Date is (YYYY-MM-DD). We seriously need more bootloader freedom on computers, clearly the computer 'companies' are as always not doing their job they are getting paid for. Like everyone else said here when booting legacy all ISO's work just fine, Windows or Linux, normal boot or other methods. My USB is an MBR partitioned and Secure boot enabled one, but of course on my computers Secure Boot is disabled. Before that in UEFI only mode I was able to boot Linux ISO's in normal mode too, and Windows ISO's all worked fine whether wimboot or normal mode. This all happened after updating my BIOS after 2-3 years last week. When comparing Rufus vs Easy2Boot, the Slant community. ![]() When booting UEFI only, I can boot all Linux ISO's (only in grub2 mode), but WinPE and Windows based ones are not working in normal, wimboot or memdisk mode. Ventoy has added experimental support for IA32 UEFI since v1. Expect to spend weeks if not months on it if you're new to GRUB scripts/components.I have the same issue many described here, boot process hangs after install block io protocol XXXXXXXX. unfortunately documentation on these is poor, and some modules are mutually exclusive, so have fun.īest of luck getting a robust boot menu script going. You'll also want to make sure you've insmod'ed any modules you need for your hardware as necessary (storage, USB, etc.). Which makes it difficult to make these future-proof. Add a menu like follows to ventoygrub.cfg, only need to change myvdiskpath to the absolute path of the actual file (from the root of that partition). Method 1 Please refer Boot Image Files In Local Disk Method 2 Please refer Menu Extension Plugin for details about the custom boot menu. ![]() Using the built-in GRUB menus won't work in many cases. You can also boot a vdisk file in local disk by Ventoy. In general you'll have to boot the kernels directly as shown above. boot=live union=overlay config components toram=.squashfs findiso=. vmlinuz boot=casper file=./ed iso-scan/filename=. I just love the tool for what it is.Īssuming you loopback mount the ISO, I think these are the major args. I am in no way personally involved with Ventoy, nor do I have a stake in it. It's one of the very few tools I endorse without any hesitation or reservation. Ventoy is great!!! I'd recommend everyone to at least have a look at it. Until I discovered Ventoy, about a year or two ago, I would always be hesitant to recommend running Linux from USB, unless I knew the exact setup (or it involved someone with a decent technical skills). The situation certainly got better/easier with the years, but it can still be a gamble if an odd Linux distro will actually boot successfully from USB or not. ![]() I honestly don't care to remember all the odd issues/failures I've encountered during those 17 years. Even if it does not support absolutely everything (last time I checked), it is by far the most hassle free and sure-fire solution.įor context, I have professionally deployed Linux on USB, ever since around 2004. Ventoy is indeed one of the best (if not THE best) tool for this. ![]()
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