tfmeier Troubleshooter

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  • You're a champion! After all this while all I had to do is to set the BIOS to default, boot the LIve DVD and install. System now boots successfully. Thanks very much for this. FYI, I'm using BIOS P11.B4 which confirms what you said; i.e. you don't need a "L" version BIOS to boot/run Linux
  • Thanks for the ongoing support. Yes there is a level of frustration :) No-one has told me it can't be done so I try to push on :) and yes, I tried to have different angles to this hence the different posts - hope I don't violate any community protocols. When I booted the live DVD I believe I chose legacy not the UEFI…
  • Well the whole idea is for me to build a Linux only machine, no dual boot. Just a single Linux computer. I can't get any clear explanation for the purpose of the "L" BIOS versions but at the moment I can't boot a Fedora instance which I have installed on the same machine from Linux Live DVD and I'm wondering whether it's…
  • No unfortunately disk A was replaced with disk B, then I booted a Linux ISO and installed Linux onto disk B. So at the time I booted the ISO the BIOS should have picked up disk B... I'm still wondering whether I need P11.B4L as opposed to P11.B4 which I currently have. Problem is I can't install that BIOS as the Acer…
  • Disk A is no longer connected. I just mentioned it for the purpose of BIOS; i.e. with the current BIOS I can boot into the Win10 disk A. I then remove disk A, install disk B, boot and install Fedora and upon rebooting get the "Can't find boot media. The disks are connect on a SATA off the motherboard.
  • Maybe I didn't explain myself well enough earlier on as I'm not a Linux expert ::astonished: I have two disks: Disk A with Win10 on it (boots up) and a new empty disk - disk B. I want to install Fedora 32 onto disk B and make this a dedicated (headless) Fedora system. I can complete the whole process (booting Fedora live…
  • Latest Fedora 32 workstation
  • I'm using the latest Fedora 32 workstation. Boot into the Live CD, then select install to hard disk and follow the instructions. Then when rebooting system complains it can't find a boot drive. Using BIOS P11.B4 with Secure Boot 'Disabled' and Launch CSM to 'Always'; boot menu 'Enabled'
  • I get the same error; i.e. "ROM file ROMID is not compatible with existing BIOS ROMID" I'm currently running P11.B4 and want to upgrade to P11.B4L as I'm building a Linux workstation (no dual boot but straight boot to just Linux). I understand I need a BIOS ending in "L" How to fix this error?
  • Tried an NTFS formatted USB drive. After copying the BIOS zip file contents I couldn't see the USB drive via the F12 boot menu so that doesn't seem to work either. On the zip file the instructions only mention USB. I'm getting a bit frustrated by this - especially as I understand there are XC-603 computers that run Linux.…
  • Yes, I did see the "appendix" folder from P11.B4L BIOS and followed the instructions. The thing that's not clear is the USB drive format whether it has to be NTFS or FAT32 format. Mine is FAT32. The instructions say to boot to the USB drive (via F12) which I do but then the following error message comes up about a missing…
  • No, mine is P11.B4. I have downloaded P11.B4L onto a FAT32 formatted USB drive, copied the contents of the P11.B4L zip file onto the drive and booted onto it (F12 > USB drive). It gives me the following messages on the console I don't understand. Try (hd0.0): FAT32: No GRLDRTry (hdo, 1): invalid or null Try (hd0, 2):…
  • Yes, secure mode disabled and Launch CSM to always. btw, created a new thread on this. May be more appropriate to continue there.
  • Yes, I used F12. Anyway have created a new post. Hopefully get some answers as I'm lost
  • Sorry I'm not a Linux expert by any stretch... I don't intend to run dual boot on that system. I keep the Win10 harddisk not for any particular reasons but probably more because I have an available other disk to install Linux on. So with dual boot not a requirement which BIOS would you install and are there any specific…
  • I'm in a similar situation: Have Win10 on an XC-603 and try to install Fedora on another disk 1. Downloaded Fedora ISO and burned onto DVD 2. Booted into DVD and installed Fedora 3. Removed DVD and restarted > can't find any boot media and doesn't let me boot (only boots into the DVD if I put it back) - BIOS set to secure…
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