Archlinux dual boot with windows 7 (UEFI)

Hello, i've just installed windows 7 (with UEFI) now i want to install archlinux i have a free partition with 400GB.
- Should i have create another EFI partition?
- What should i do in order to install grub?
- (I followed the wiki but each time i fail)

xGeek wrote:here is the output of  parted -l
http://sprunge.us/TTca
(i still have free 400GB)
Looks fine so far.
Is there a question there? You haven't explained what you have tried or how it has failed.
You say that you tried to install grub but failed each time. You do need to install Arch (or another Linux distro) first as far as I know. That is, you cannot begin by installing the boot manager - you need to install the system first.
Please read the Beginners' Guide. Also see the link in my signature on asking good questions.

Similar Messages

  • Arch does not show up in Grub when dual booting with windows 8

    I just installed Arch linux, dual booting with windows 8 using the beginners guide[https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners'_Guide] itself. Now Grub is installed and i can only find Windows 8 and I cannot find Arch. Is there a way I can find if arch linux has been installed and show up in Grub.
    Sorry, I am a newbie, but i chose to post this topic here and not newbie corner as it is installation related.
    My windows 8 is installed on /dev/sda1 with ntfs partition type. Arch Linux is installed on /dev/sda6 and it is ext4 partition. I dont know if this info helps.  I am using Thinkpad R61
    Last edited by sutro_droid (2013-03-06 00:30:48)

    ivokosir wrote:It may be that you didn't install os-prober before running grub-mkconfig. This happened to me once, I hope I'm not too late to warn you.
    I am sorry, yes you are too late. I have wiped windows 8 and performed clean install. No regrets. And as a matter of fact, I did grub-config and then installed os-prober. That could be the problem. Thanks. I will try this again another time.

  • [SOLVED] RTC and dual booting with Windows 8/8.1

    I am planning ahead of installing Arch on a windows 8.1 laptop, and need to understand whether or not the known Windows registry hack to get windows to use UTC for the RTC is still valid for Windows 8/8.1?  I have been searching via google and the usual sources of information, but it is not clear to me if there are problems doing this, specifically if arch is dual booted with Windows 8/8.1 rather than older versions of the MS OS. Certainly I have used the technique without any problem in the past when dual booting Windows XP with Arch on several different machines.
    Does anyone have personal experience with doing this on a Windows 8 or 8.1 machine and can report here on whether it works successfully or not?
    Thanks for any advice.
    Last edited by mcloaked (2014-02-11 21:16:21)

    Since there were no replies at this point I thought I would just go ahead and implement the registry hack on the Windows 8.1 O/S in the laptop and see if Windows behaves.  It appears to be OK, with the displayed time being correct after reboot, and time synchronisation remaining fine with no problems seen in the displayed time, although I won't be able to read the RTC directly until I have completed the Arch install in the coming week or two.  I now don't foresee any issues with the time synchronisation between booting Arch and Windows 8.1 so I will mark this as solved.
    Since the RTC is now in UTC then normal clock config in Arch using chrony should perform normally once the install is done and the new system set up.
    Last edited by mcloaked (2014-02-11 21:17:11)

  • Dual Boot with Windows ME

    i am very new to all this stuff. Can someone please guide me on how to go about installing Unix so that it also dual boots with windows ME.
    i am planning on doing some unix work..and installing oracle and learning oracle in the bargain at home. do u think this is the best way to go. any suggestions/guidance is appreciated.
    many many thanks

    I'd consider buying a second, inexpensive PC for Solaris. You can get a $20 mechanical switch that will let you share a single monitor. If two keyboards and mice are inconvenient, you can buy a KVM (keyboard-video-mouse) switch. If you just want to hack around, it's much more convenient to have two PCs. (IMHO)

  • Dual Booting with Windows 8 and 7 Pro in a G6 - 2235us Notebook

    I have a G6 - 2235us Notebook 64 bit  that came with Windows 8.0  installed.
    I would like to install Windows 7 Pro and make it dual book with Windows 8.0 with 7 as the default to start.
    Would you please give me steps as to how to proceed and also the drivers, etc I would need to download.
    Thank you.
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    Thank you Paul. I understad  I just have one more question:
    I found this page that gives info about dual booting:
    http://www.pagestart.com/win8dbwin701181301.html
    From your expertise, would you say the steps suggested on that
    page could succeed for making Win 8 and 7 dual boot in this particular machine?

  • HP Envy 700-430qe DT CTO - - - Trying to dual boot with Windows 7

                                                                                                       HELP HELP HELP
    I know how to set up double boot for several different HP computers, based mostly from what I have learned in this great forum, but this one has me stumped.
    I have been trying to install Windows 7 on this computer to double boot with Windows 8.1. I have tried to set the bios up correctly, enabled legacy, disabled secure boot, disabled fast boot. I booted under UEFI  to get in to GPT mode, still no luck at all.
    The installation always goes all the way through the first 4 steps and through most of the 5th.  After the reboot in the 5th step, it stops and can not go any further. A message appears without any error code. 
    I think it may be a problem in this computers UEIF  settings, but I do not know if anymore of them to try.
    I can use all the help you all can offer.
    Thank, Brad
    PS, If we ever get this to work, then I will have to ask you where to find drivers for this model, if they exist!

    Hi Brad,
    According to the information that you posted you have a W8 delivered PC.
    If the graphics card in your PC can run in legacy mode then you should be OK.
    I suggest that you use a separate HP for W7 as you will probably run into partition placement issues when you try to install W7 to the same HD. Installation to the same HD is not impossible but you will have to remove some partitions such as the recovery partition and then resize the "C" partition to make room for W7. You should be able to use Disk Management to delete partitions and resize the "C" partition.
    Be sure to create the external HP recovery media as it will be needed. Backup your data to separate external media.You should also consider installing the HP diagnostics to an external flash drive.
    Boot in the BIOS and set the BIOS to legacy mode and fast boot off.  Save the changes on exit.
    Now boot up the external recovery media (don't select the EFI media if shown) and reload your PC with W8.
    If your PC boots up and runs OK then you should be good to load W7.
    If you are using a separate HD for W7 then unplug the original HD.  If you don't then W7 will install a boot manager to the primary HD.
    HP DV9700, t9300, Nvidia 8600, 4GB, Crucial C300 128GB SSD
    HP Photosmart Premium C309G, HP Photosmart 6520
    HP Touchpad, HP Chromebook 11
    Custom i7-4770k,Z-87, 8GB, Vertex 3 SSD, Samsung EVO SSD, Corsair HX650,GTX 760
    Custom i7-4790k,Z-97, 16GB, Vertex 3 SSD, Plextor M.2 SSD, Samsung EVO SSD, Corsair HX650, GTX 660TI
    Windows 7/8 UEFI/Legacy mode, MBR/GPT

  • When dual-booting with Windows 7, Mac OSX time settings reset every reboot.

    I have recently installed Windows 7 Professional on my mid 2010 MacBook Pro via BootCamp (Running Mavericks BTW). Everything runs grean and have not experienced any problems on the Windows side, but I have a problem with Mac OSX now. When I am using Windows 7, and I reboot into Mac OSX, I find that my time settings are wrong. It seems like my time zone has changed, because the date is correct, as well as the minutes, but the hour is always wrong. When I go to Date & Time in System Preferences, and my time zone is correct, but I still have to chage the hour in the time. Any ideas as to why this is happening and how to stop it would be greatly appreciated.

    If you dual boot your Windows PC with OS X or Linux, you may have experienced a problem in which your clocks reset themselves incorrectly every time you boot into Windows. Here's a simple registry edit to fix that.
    Essentially, the incorrect clock setting happens because OS X and Linux use GMT time while Windows tries to synchronize with your local time zone, getting confused when you reboot between the two. Apple's own Boot Camp drivers for Windows are supposed to fix this problem, though some users have noticed that it still happens even with the drivers installed, and some Linux users are left out in the cold. Furthermore, if you have a Hackintosh, you can't install the Boot Camp drivers, so you'll need to find another way around the problem.
    To fix it, just hit Start and type regedit.exe in the search box. Hit Enter and navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\TimeZoneInformation. Right click anywhere in the right pane and hit New > DWORD (32-bit) Value. Name it RealTimeIsUniversal, then double click on it and give it a value of 1.
    Lastly, reboot into OS X, then reboot back into Windows. You should now notice that your clock actually displays the correct time.

  • Simple UEFI GPT Dual boot with windows 8 boot partition question.

    Hi everyone,
    I think it's obvious from the quuestion that I'm a newbie here (and from the location of the post) but I have read (several times):
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/UEFI
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/UEFI_Bootloaders
    and the incredibly helpful:
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginner%27s_Guide
    along with many forum posts. unfortunately this:
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wi … _Dual_Boot
    appears out of date and so I need to ask you fine people my question.
    If I want to dual boot Arch with my Windows 8 my question is on the boot partition. I have an existing windows EFI boot partition. should I mount this partition to my "/mnt/boot/efi" folder and then copy the files to this partition when I am setting up rEFInd (my chosen bootloader from wiki page, comments/suggestions are welcome) or should I setup a separate boot partition for my arch installation. I assume from reading about rEFInd that the former is how I should do it as this seems to be how refind would be able to "see" my windows bootloader.
    The reason I am double checking and asking here is I know that windows can be a temperamental beast and is very prone to not booting so I don't want to mess with the windows boot partition unduly.
    Thanks in advance guys, looking forward to getting my arch working!
    Last edited by crashandburn4 (2013-03-03 13:42:43)

    $esp = EFI System Partition?
    also, ok, gummiboot, I'm glad I can mount the esp as /boot (that was my original thought but reread the tutorial and wasn't sure) just double checking, it is the esp created by windows 8 that I mount?
    in addition, as I am slightly new to this is there any tutorial that can tell me how to set up gummiboot? I've looked here:
    http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/gummiboot
    but don't see anything in the way of detailed instructions.
    from your post: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=159061
    I'm gonna guess it's something like this (please let me know if this is right)
    /mount $ESP /mnt/boot
    pacman -S gummiboot
    (after chrooting)
    //exit chroot
    gummiboot
    *stuff saying gummiboot is not configured*
    gummiboot install
    is it something like that? can anyone point me towards a manual
    Last edited by crashandburn4 (2013-03-03 14:58:53)

  • How to dual boot with Windows 8.1 and Arch?

    Hello everyone,
    I've been looking into using Linux as my daily driver since having some experience with it on a server. After some digging around, I think Arch Linux is the best distro for me, now onto where I am.
    I'm currently running Windows 8.1 (updated from Windows 8, which updated from Windows 7) on a Dell Inspiron 15R SE laptop, I want to dual boot Arch Linux with it. I've looked at the wiki and I'm still not entirely sure what to do.
    Can anyone give me a quick list of steps of what to do to dual boot this? I've dual booted Ubuntu in the past and it was really simple because an installer did it all.
    Thanks, Expi.

    stqn wrote:
    Expi1 wrote:Thanks, I'm mostly struggling with how to partition for Arch and then how to do the bootloader. I'm using Win8 64-bit and from what I understand a Legacy BIOS bootloader. I'm not entirely sure what I should be partitioning the C: into, I've done partitions before, just not for Arch and then I'm not sure whether to use GRUB or syslinux, or if I even need those. Or if I need to use GPT or MBR?
    Your disk is already partitionned so you don’t have to choose between GPT or MBR, the choice is already made.
    You don’t partition “C:”, that is the name of a Windows partition. You partition a drive.
    Grub or syslinux, use whatever the beginners guide tells you to. Personally I think syslinux is simpler which is why I’m using it (but I’m not dual-booting, if that matters).
    You’re not saying what your problem is with partitionning, so it’s hard to help.
    Thanks for getting back to me, I'm not sure if I just create one large partition for Archlinux or if I have to create multiple? Where I'm also confused is with the Creating Filesystems part of the guide. I don't understand how I'd do this in Windows, or what /dev/sda1 is referring to.
    As for the bootloader part, the Beginner's Guide gives you a choice between syslinux and grub, what I'm not sure about is which to use considering I'm dualbooting. How it will affect my windows bootloader, do I disregard that and use GRUB now? I'm unclear on how that works.
    I'm also aware I need to disable Secure Boot, I just searched my BIOS options and couldn't find anything remotely relating to that, so I'm assuming it's not an issue since this computer was originally on Windows 7 anyway?
    Thanks again, Expi.
    Last edited by Expi1 (2014-03-06 19:54:30)

  • Trying to create dual boot with Windows 7 on Yoga 11s

    I was trying to install Windows 2008 server (I said Windows 7 in the title because it's essentially the same) on a Yoga 11s in dual boot configuration with the factory-installed  Windows 8 upgraded to 8.1, and as expected it's a pain in the butt.
    I ran into the catch-22 that you can only boot from a USB external optical drive in legacy mode, and then Windows refuses to install on a GPT-type partition.  Dead end there.
    As plan B, I tried installing from my MSDN DVD from within Windows 8.1.  It chugged along for a while, but then hung after the second restart.  It reached a state where the machine is dual boot, and goes into Windows 8.1 OK, but 2008 server hangs on startup even in safe mode.  Probably it's a driver problem.  I downloaded all Windows 7 drivers for the Yoga 11s from the Lenovo website, and they would work fine for 2008 server if there was a way to put them in place.
    I have been through the process twice before on previous machines.  After getting the server OS to install, none of the devices work well or at all, but I could patiently install the drivers using device manager.  This is the first time where I can't get the server OS to install to a bootable condition.  Is it hopless, or might there be documentation somewhere about how I could manually place drivers in the right folders to enable the OS to start?
    Plan C might be to follow Lenovo's instructions to create a UEFI bootable USB flash drive and try to install from that.  Would that work better than installing from within Windows 8.1, or just reach the same roadblock?

    Reformat that new drive with SL DVD.
    Go into SL DVD again, go to Utility Menu and choose DU.
    Then try repairing the drive or better yet, just erase the drive (not the volume) and try again.
    There are enough changes between Tiger partition scheme and SL that you would want to. RAID arrays built with Leopard will not allow installing SL, they have to be recreated (and can then have Leopard and SL).
    Go

  • [SOLVED] Dual boot with Windows 8, problems after updating Windows

    Hi all,
    I have been maintaining a dual boot of arch and Windows 8 for some time. I recently updated Windows to 8.1, and found that the update process had two side effects:
    1) The update added a new partition in the middle of my file table, so my /etc/fstab which referenced "/dev/sda6" was wrong because that partition is now "/dev/sda7."
    2) The default boot device was switched to the Windows Boot Loader instead of grub. But, this is not a problem because I can work around this by using the "Choose boot device" feature of my bios at start up.
    So, neither of these problems are critical for me at the moment. I can fix my fstab and just press a hotkey at startup.
    EDIT: I have avoided the /etc/fstab issue by referencing my partitions using UUID as specified in https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Fstab.
    How do I set the default boot device back to grub? There is some weirdness here, I think windows is using UEFI booting and my grub uses the old booting system.
    Last edited by bjmnbraun (2014-05-14 19:00:36)

    Rex: I tried that command, got some warning messages regarding blocklists, but no dice.
    Loqs: You are right about windows using a ESP and UEFI while my linux is not booting using UEFI. My bios is configured to try "Legacy boot" first before trying UEFI. Getting linux to boot using UEFI seemed like a pain, so...
    I went into my BIOS settings and found that the Windows Boot Manager boot device was listed in front of my hard disk (which boots linux). I don't think this used to be the case, so something about the update caused my BIOS to reorder the boot devices (probably because the partitions changed).
    Switching my hard disk to be above the Windows Boot Manager in the boot device list now makes me boot into linux by default, and I can boot into windows by pressing a hotkey at bootup and selecting the windows boot manager.

  • Dual Booting With Windows 8?

    So, I found this guide: http://www.neuraladvance.com/2012/11/17 … -uefi-lvm/. While I've ran and used Arch before a few times, it's been a while.
    The problem is that the guide decides to use the Windows 8 partition itself to install Arch; what I would like to do is use my own partition for Arch, making it as independent as possible from Win8, and both booted with Grub. I've already wiped everything and reinstalled Windows 8 first, however I'm a bit confused as to how to properly setup a UEFI partition. Period. Are there any good guides on how to do this? The Dual Boot article on the wiki, unfortunately, wasn't very helpful in my case.
    While I have the latest snapshot already on USB, it doesn't boot properly, not allowing access to /dev/tty (i.e., I can't do anything). Also, I unfortunately can't use GParted Live since none of my DVDs are rewriteable; they've already been used up over the years. So, if anyone has any suggestions on how best I can approach this (or good resources which are to the point; i.e., not too much details to wade through), it would definitely be appreciated.
    Thanks.

    holland01 wrote:
    So, I found this guide: http://www.neuraladvance.com/2012/11/17 … -uefi-lvm/. While I've ran and used Arch before a few times, it's been a while.
    The problem is that the guide decides to use the Windows 8 partition itself to install Arch; what I would like to do is use my own partition for Arch, making it as independent as possible from Win8, and both booted with Grub.
    By "the Windows 8 partition," it appears that you're referring to the EFI System Partition (ESP) that Windows created -- /dev/sda1 in the referenced guide. I've only skimmed the article, but I didn't notice any reference to using any actual Windows partitions in it. Note that the ESP doesn't really "belong" to any one OS; it definitely is not a Windows partition. It is, as its name suggests, a partition that "belongs" to the EFI. It's meant to be shared across OSes.
    That said, if you really want to, you can create multiple ESPs. This is legal according to the EFI spec. Unfortunately, it can cause problems, since the Windows 7 installer gets very confused if it sees multiple ESPs and an installation of Windows 7 will fail. I don't know if Windows 8 has the same problem, but if it does, and if you find that you need to re-install Windows, having multiple ESPs will complicate matters. Thus, I generally recommend sticking with one ESP per disk if at all possible. Be sure to keep it backed up in case some ill-behaved program trashes it, though.

  • How do i set up a dual boot with windows

    I am trying to set up a dual boot system with both the snow leapard and win 7,  I have partioned the drive and have windows booting up.  How do I get the drivers for the machine that windows will recognize.  I am researching this for my dad his I mac is one of the new 21 inch models.

    If you want dual boot you would use Boot Camp which is built into Snow Leopard. You will need a license of WIndows 7. You can install it by using Boot Camp Assistant however prior to doing so you probably should look at how it's correctly done, here is a You Tube Boot Camp instructions video I would recommend you watch first.
    If your dad wants to run Windows 7 & OS X simultaneously then he will need either Parallels or VMWare Fusion. Both are virtualization applications that allow one to run Windows and OS X side by side. This is a great solution unless he is a gamer or needs to run graphics intensive applications like CAD/CAM or 3D Games or anything that is 3D intensive. For all other types of applications virtualization is an excellent solution.
    If you choose the Boot Camp solution there is a forum specifically for that which is where I'd recommend posting questions.
    Roger

  • Dual Boot with Windows Vista

    Hi
    I am a complete n00b with Mac. The director at my company requested me to set up her MacBook (running Mac OSX 10.4.11) to dualboot with Windows Vista 32 bit. I have been searching Google and I cannot find anything.
    Can someone please run me through what I'll need and how exactly to do it?
    Thank you in advance

    Hi and Welcome to Apple Discussions...
    Check out the BootCamp set up guide before installing Windows on a Mac.
    http://manuals.info.apple.com/en/bootcampinstall-setup.pdf
    As Kurt mentions... you must be running Leopard 10.5.x to do this.
    And more information here. http://lifehacker.com/software/geek-to-live/virtualize-and-dual+boot-the-same-wi ndows-on-your-mac-267905.php
    Carolyn

  • Dual Boot with Win8 on UEFI with SSHD

    Hi folks!
    I have a Lenovo Y40 laptop which currently has Windows 8.1 preloaded, which I unfortunately have to keep for a host of reasons. I've been meaning to install linux on my laptop for a while though, and now I finally have the time. However, I've been doing some research, and there are just too many things I don't understand that are keeping me from just jumping in and installing "on the fly".
    Here's where my problems are:
    This laptop has a hybrid drive in it, specifically the WDC WD10S21X-24R1BT0-SSHD (I copied this out of the device manager), and I hear linux has problems with that? Also, this laptop uses UEFI, which I have zero experience with. Lastly, I have no idea which of the many preloaded partitions (listed below) are necessary for windows 8 to boot and function properly.
    List of my partitions:
    Two partitions labeled "Recovery Partition" in the disk manager (one 1GB and the other 15.64 GB)
    The EFI partition
    A partition labeled "OEM Partition"
    The partition my C:\ drive is on
    This absurd 25 GB partition with the name "LENOVO" which is mounted as D:/ and has folders named "Applications" and "Drivers"
    So basically, I simply do not know how to install arch (or linux in general) on this kind of a system. I'm really hoping someone can generously give up some of their time to maybe send a few links and some basic steps to get this installation procedure going.
    Thanks!
    P.S. I have installed Arch before, but on a BIOS system with "normal" MBR-formatted hard drives. I'm pretty good with Linux, so you can assume a fair amount of previous knowledge.

    mahkoe wrote:This laptop has a hybrid drive in it, specifically the WDC WD10S21X-24R1BT0-SSHD (I copied this out of the device manager), and I hear linux has problems with that?
    Sounds unlikely; what problems? Where did you hear this?
    As for your partitions: shrink the C: partition (from Windows, defrag first) & mount /boot to the EFI partition (ie share this partition with Windows).
    Leave all the other partitions intact.
    Just follow the Beginner's Guide, it includes details pertaining to installing UEFI systems.

Maybe you are looking for

  • A strange query of queries bug in CF11?

    Hi, I have this strange query of queries result that could be a bug in CF11.  The result is fine in CF10. Basically, I have 2 queries, qrA and qrB.  I do a join of the two in joinQr, after which I do a query of qrA.  Since I didn't alter qrA in any w

  • Template works fine on PC but not on Server

    I developed this site with just HTML, CSS, and Javascript.  Now, I'm trying to integrate it into Dreamweaver CS4.  I created a site and gave it all of the valid Remote Info to connect to the server.  When I open the site in Dreamweaver and open my te

  • How to install oracle workflow on my desktop?

    i am having oracle 9i in my machine. i want to install oracle workflow. kindly tell me how to install or provide me with the link where installation has been explained.please let me know where i will find that documen?t thanks.

  • IMac wont start up after upgrade to Mavericks

    I installed Mavericks as an upgrade to OS X 10.6.8 on my iMac and with in a half an hour of use my computer froze, I have tried all the normal rebooting techniques but my opening screen still has the vertical green stripes, even after using the disk

  • HT5622 Why I'm I being asked to change my password

    Why do I keep being asked to change my password?