README for mondo/mindi usage on UEFI based systems A new replacement of the BIOS has emerged called UEFI. Depending on the boot mode you use (UEFI or BIOS), mondo and mindi will have to behave accordingly. Depending of your choice, software configuration, you may also use GPT or MBR as a file table format. Refer to README.ia64 for more details on how mondo and mindi deal with that. In BIOS mode, mindi uses sylinux as boot loader for the restore media. As this doesn't work reliably yet with UEFI other strategies have been usd: When using a distribution like RHEL6.x, then grub 0.97 will be used as boot loader for the restore media. During tests, we had success with grub-0.97-93.el6.x86_64 part of RHEL 6.6. In particular, the version provided with RHEL 6.5 doesn't boot ! When using a distribution like RHEL7.x, or Debian 8, then grub 2.x will be used as boot loader for the restore media. If when booting in UEFI mode on a system, the current media made doesn't boot automatically, in order to restore your system, you'll have to go on the UEFI shell and do something like the following: Shell> FS0: FS0:\> CD EFI FS0:\EFI\> CD BOOT FS0:\EFI\BOOT\> grub This supposes that your drive is seen as first media (FS0), which can be confirmed using the map command at UEFI shell prompt. Search on the result line for CD related lines. Then you'll be at the standard boot menu to restore your system with the choice of options. You'll have to respect the case used in the example upper. For now, MondoRescue doesn't invoke efibootmgr to recreate menu entries, so you'll have to recreate them manually for now. Which also means that after the restore, during the next reboot, you may have to select on which device to boot as the menu may be worngly pointing to inexistant media. In some case the correct entry will automatically be added to your menu. If that's not the case, use efibootmgr from Linux to recreate it. We also do not support Secure Boot yet. So you'll have to boot the MondoRescue media with it disabled. Useful links: https://blog.uncooperative.org/blog/2014/02/06/the-efi-system-partition/ https://wiki.debian.org/UEFI Useful commands: Shell> bcfg boot dump -v -b Please report any problem around that tool to bruno@mondorescue.org Bruno. 2016-03-21 Make instructions more generic 2015-08-28 Initial file