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- The rEFInd Boot Manager
That's where rEFInd comes into play rEFInd is a fork of the earlier rEFIt boot manager, which has not seen any development since 2010 Since rEFInd's release, Chrisoph Pfisterer, rEFIt's author, has begun pointing to rEFInd as its successor project
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: Getting rEFInd - rodsbooks. com
This package runs the refind-install script (described on the Installing and Uninstalling rEFInd page) as part of the installation process The source RPM file might or might not build on your system as-is; it relies on assumptions about the locations of the GNU-EFI development files
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: Installing and Uninstalling rEFInd
If a Web search has brought you here, you may want to start at the main page Don't be scared by the length of this page! Only portions of this page apply to any given user, and most people can install rEFInd from an RPM or Debian package in a matter of seconds or by using the refind-install script in minute or two
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: Using rEFInd - rodsbooks. com
If you want to launch BIOS-mode OSes from rEFInd, you must edit the scanfor line in refind conf, as described on the Configuring the Boot Manager page On Macs, rEFInd scans for BIOS-based OSes by default, since such configurations are a common way to launch Windows on Macs
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: Configuring the Boot Manager - rodsbooks. com
This feature is intended for users who want to have rEFInd appear in its own menu, with the version launched in this way behaving differently from the original—for instance, to have a secondary rEFInd that provides boot options hidden by the main one
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: rEFInd Features - rodsbooks. com
rEFInd can auto-detect Linux initial RAM disk files and read Linux kernel options from a refind_linux conf file These features support (nearly) automatic handling of Linux kernels with embedded EFI stub loader support
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: Managing Secure Boot - rodsbooks. com
Unfortunately, it also complicates multi-boot configurations such as those that rEFInd is intended to manage This page describes some Secure Boot basics and two specific ways of using rEFInd with Secure Boot: Using the Shim program and using the PreLoader program
- The rEFInd Boot Manager: Keeping rEFInd Booting - rodsbooks. com
If you installed rEFInd from Linux, chances are you used this tool, even if you don't realize it (The refind-install script calls efibootmgr, and this script is called automatically by the rEFInd RPM and Debian packages ) The easiest way to do this is to use the refind-mkdefault script
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