Suchergebnisse

Suchergebnisse 1-3 von insgesamt 3.

  • Nope...Just start HermitShell (BuildIn UEFI Shell) and locate boot.efi. It's hidden somewhere in the Filesystems of your drives. To browse your DIsks type fsX: where X is an number. fs0 is always the EFI Partition on your primary Disk you can browse the partitions of your disk by increasing the number after fx. If only a single drive is installed in your System you should, depending on your Partitions, succeed on fs2 or fs3. Use the ls command to list the Filesystems contend. If you see somethin…
  • Use hermit shell and the bcfg command again. Type bcfg boot dump to list all entries and determine the number of your recently added entry then use bcfg boot rm NUMBER where number represents the number of the entry you took from bcfg boot dump.
  • Nice glad it worked for you.