This section relates to preparing, booting and installing a GNU/Linux distribution, using nothing more than a USB flash drive.
Connect the USB drive. Check dmesg:
$ dmesg
Check lsblk to confirm which drive it is:
$ lsblk
Check that it wasn't automatically mounted. If it was, unmount it. For example:
$ sudo umount /dev/sdX*
# umount /dev/sdX*
dmesg told you what device it is. Overwrite the drive, writing your distro ISO to it with dd. For example:
$ sudo dd if=gnulinux.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=8M; sync
# dd if=gnulinux.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=8M; sync
Guix USB installers use the GRUB bootloader, unlike most GNU/Linux installers which will likely use ISOLINUX.
To boot the Guix live USB install, select Search for GRUB configuration (grub.cfg) outside of CBFS from the GRUB payload menu. After you have done that, a new menuentry will appear at the very bottom with text like Load Config from (usb0); select that, and it should boot.
Once you have installed Guix onto the main storage device, check grub_cbfs.html#libreboot_grub_config_ondisk for hints on how to boot it.
Tip: don't use the official net install image. Download the full GNOME ISO (the ~1.5GiB one). In this ISO, there is still the capability to boot the net install, while it also provides an easy to use live system (which you can boot from USB). This ISO also works using syslinux_configfile -i (the Parse ISOLINUX menu entries in the default GRUB configuration that libreboot uses).
Boot it in GRUB using the Parse ISOLINUX config (USB) option. A new menu should appear in GRUB, showing the boot options for that distro; this is a GRUB menu, converted from the usual ISOLINUX menu provided by that distro.
If the ISOLINUX parser or Search for GRUB configuration options won't work, then press C to get to the GRUB command line.
grub> ls
Get the device from above output, eg (usb0). Example:
grub> cat (usb0)/isolinux/isolinux.cfg
Either this will show the ISOLINUX menuentries for that ISO, or link to other .cfg files, for example /isolinux/foo.cfg.
If it did that, then you do:
grub> cat (usb0)/isolinux/foo.cfg
And so on, until you find the correct menuentries for ISOLINUX.
Now look at the ISOLINUX menuentry. It'll look like:
kernel /path/to/kernel
append PARAMETERS initrd=/path/to/initrd MAYBE_MORE_PARAMETERS
GRUB works the same way, but in it's own way. Example GRUB commands:
grub> linux (usb0)/path/to/kernel PARAMETERS MAYBE_MORE_PARAMETERS
grub> initrd (usb0)/path/to/initrd
grub> boot
Of course this will vary from distro to distro. If you did all that correctly, it should now be booting the ISO
the way you specified.
Most of these issues occur when using libreboot with coreboot's 'text mode' instead of the coreboot framebuffer. This mode is useful for booting payloads like memtest86+ which expect text-mode, but for GNU/Linux distributions it can be problematic when they are trying to switch to a framebuffer because it doesn't exist.
In most cases, you should use the vesafb ROM's. Example filename: libreboot_ukdvorak_vesafb.rom.
Use one of the ROM images with vesafb in the filename (uses coreboot framebuffer instead of text-mode).
When using the ROM images that use coreboot's "text mode" instead of the coreboot framebuffer,
booting the Trisquel net installer results in graphical corruption because it is trying to switch to a framebuffer which doesn't
exist. Use that kernel parameter on the 'linux' line when booting it:
vga=normal fb=false
Tested in Trisquel 6 (and 7). This forces debian-installer to start in text-mode, instead of trying to switch to a framebuffer.
If selecting text-mode from a GRUB menu created using the ISOLINUX parser, you can press E on the menu entry to add this. Or, if you are booting manually (from GRUB terminal) then just add the parameters.
This workaround was found on the page: https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/ch05s04.html. It should also work for gNewSense, Debian and any other apt-get distro that provides debian-installer (text mode) net install method.
Copyright © 2014, 2015 Francis Rowe <info@gluglug.org.uk>
This document is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International Public License and all future versions.
A copy of the license can be found at ../cc-by-sa-4.txt.
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