| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Read the updates in the README for more background and guidance.
User notice:
As a one-time action the very first time you boot a Secure Boot enabled
liveslak ISO, you will have to enroll the liveslak certificate
(/EFI/BOOT/liveslak.der) with which the Slackware boot-up binaries
(grub and kernel) were signed into your computer's MOK (Machine Owner Key
database).
This enrollment request will show on-screen during initial boot,
just follow the prompts to 'enroll from disk'. Afterwards the computer
will reboot and from then on, your liveslak will boot without any
user intervention on your Secure Boot computer.
Note:
liveslak uses Fedora's initial boot loader (the 'shim') which
has been signed by Microsoft. In future we may get our own
signed shim for liveslak and/or Slackware, but don't hold your breath.
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Note that UEFI PXE-boot is not yet working, I do not know why.
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In particular, it seems that including the 'ahci' grub module caused failure
on boot, because the actual Live USB stick would not be detected and the
local harddisk would be detected as (ahci0).
The script has also been enhanced so that the 'grub-mkimage' commandline will
not get fed any non-existing module, which would otherwise abort the command.
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This requires functionality in grub which is currently not enabled
in Slackware's grub package.
If you want a 32-bit Live ISO that boots on UEFI computers, you need
to recompile Slackware's grub with the patch for grub.SlackBuild which
you can find in the ./patches subdirectory.
Then you need to set the variable "EFI32" to "YES" in the
'make_slackware_live.sh' script and (re-)generate your 32-bit ISO.
The resulting 32-bit Live ISO will be UEFI-bootable.
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