Very sorry for the long delay. Been working some 11 hour days and it is very hot here and that just drags a feller down.
/boot/EFI is empty. This is what my concern about this install is. That obviously should have something in it but I haven't any real idea what it should be.
Is it just a copy of what is in the ESP?
The /boot/grub2/grub.cfg file seems to be good. Calls for root on 'hd0,gpt2' and the guid or whatever uuid is called in GPT is correct.
It is apparent looking at that file that the drive is being treated as the only drive on the system. I am accessing the files from my internal drives so it is mounted now as sdi.
But sda1 is the ESP, sda2 is /, sda3 is /home, sda4 is /swap and then there is a populated data partition, /Shared on sda10. That last number is left over from when there were more partitions on this drive.
Have been thinking about this and hope to mess with it yet tonight.
Not sure that the GPT is really clean. So may simply let the installer work its automagical install on the whole drive. I don't like doing that because I tend to have a lot of installs and, frankly don't trust scripts to partition drives in the first place. So I am a control freak.
But I would like to attempt to put something in /boot/EFI first. Something has to go in there.
I guess from your post that simply copying the /boot/grub2/grub.cfg file to /boot/EFI/EFI/Boot would be a good guess. I am assuming that the /mnt in your post was meant to be /boot here. /mnt in the Mageia install is empty.
But, and this looks like a large but, looking at /root/drakx/ddebug.log, a file I have no real idea what purpose it has but gather it has to do with installation, is pretty much a wash for me to try to understand. I have run Mandrake and Mageia but am a Debian user. This file, while certainly interesting and, even to me, somewhat informative about the installation process, is unlikely to help me here.
I use pluma as standard text editor and using the find function with efi as the search I can filter it down a bit though. I am starting to wonder if what I have is simply a copy of the install image or, perhaps a combination of the install image and an attempted install.
I have only one out of 3 boot choices that actually puts up a menu and that is the efi install image menu. So that is strange to no end to begin with.
In the /root/drakx/ddebug.log at line 5263 we have
* setSelectedFromCompssList:
That goes on and looks similar to a Debian dpkg set-sellection list of packages. Appears to be a KDE install while Xfce was selected and KDE carefully unselected in the installer. But just speed scanning it gives the impression that KDE should work.
At 6282 we have another;
* setSelectedFromCompssList:
Which appears to deal with sound and video. And networking. Again simply scanning it looks like it should work. Calls for the proprietary radeon blob which I normally do not use but decided to OK in this install just to see how it does.
At 10835 we have another;
* setSelectedFromCompssList:
Which seems to install Xfce.
Way down at the end it looks like the installer was convinced it had worked. Exited with no errors.
Only off note is just before all that at 17251 through 17269 which reads like;
- Code: Select all
* running: losetup /dev/loop1 /mnt/root/drakx/replay_install.img
* mounting /dev/loop1 on /mnt/root/aif-mount as type ext2, options
* running: fsck.ext2 -a /dev/loop1
fsck.ext2: Bad magic number in super-block while trying to open /dev/loop1
/dev/loop1:
The superblock could not be read or does not describe a valid ext2/ext3/ext4
filesystem. If the device is valid and it really contains an ext2/ext3/ext4
filesystem (and not swap or ufs or something else), then the superblock
is corrupt, and you might try running e2fsck with an alternate superblock:
e2fsck -b 8193 <device>
or
e2fsck -b 32768 <device>
* mounting /dev/loop1 on /mnt/root/aif-mount as type vfat, options
* running: mount -t vfat /dev/loop1 /mnt/root/aif-mount -o check=relaxed
* calling umount(/mnt/root/aif-mount)
* running: umount /mnt/root/aif-mount
* running: losetup -d /dev/loop1
* pid 3504 returned 0
But that doesn't tell me a thing. For all I know pid 3504 should return 0. Or could be the indication of a real wreak.
/root/drakx/replay_install.img means nothing to me at all but is 196.6kB. Have no idea if this is something important or simply harmless ditritus of the install process.
After looking at that /root/drakx/ddebug.log file I am not sure what I should do. Being still tired maybe I will simply wait to see what other interesting gems this thread comes up with.
Only thing that I have really seen is that I appear to have attempted to install KDE with Xfce and so will, even if this can be resolved to the point of booting up, have to reinstall and see if I can get it right. I started out as a KDE hating Gnome user. Can't say I like KDE any better now but prefer it to Gnome 3. I really like Xfce.
Have heard people say that the plethora of DEs in Gnu/Linux is a fault and discourages people from using it. I don't buy that a bit. I think that anyone should be able to pick a DE, from the existing stock, and find something that works for them better than any other base OS can offer. And there are new ones occasionally that may appeal too.
I always have OpenBox, KDE, Gnome 3 (GS), Mate and Xfce on my loaner drive and should probably add Cinnamon. People can try them out and see what they like. I try to set them up so they are more than default ready to go but not much so people can tinker with them on their own. Put a Notes document on the desktop with some pointers as to where to find menues and config tools.
Mageia does a nice job on the defaut KDE that I can live with. Usually, on the loaner drive, Mageia has both KDE and Gnome 3 on it. As an ex Gnome user I find it really irritating that I prefer to log into the KDE session.
The install I am working on now is on a drive to be dedicated to distros that I want to use about once a week or so, maybe more, to get to know them as I would want to use them if using them all the time. So I really want to get Xfce all by it self on this one. Liked Mageia 3 a lot with Xfce on it. Needed a bit of work to get it as I like it but nothing hard to do.
When I simply can't stand not using them more often then they get migrated to my internal drives. Was just about to do that on my old box when it up and fried on me.
As I want to move to uefi boot on the internals I need to get it working, if I can, on the external. Then I will have at least one distro that I know how to deal with this new system on. So Mageia 5 is in for an extended asault until I get this through my thick head.
I will pop over to the external, with the internals disabled and try all the boot options again. Will, for sure, be attempting to use that weird install boot menu to see what happens.
Self Box 1, Asus M5 A99FX Pro R2.0 MB, AMD FX 6-core FX 6300 3.5GHz, 8 gigs ram, Radeon HD 6450, antique Audigy audeo card. 4 internal drives (3 500gig and one 320 gig). Currently only one 500gig external.