Hey guys,
I recently installed RemixOS 3.0.204 on an Acer Alpha Switch 12, and since I'm running it with Windows 10 but I intend to install some Linux flavor later on, I decided to go ahead and use rEFInd for multibooting (there's also the fact that RemixOS' GRUB wouldn't show up anywhere in my system).
My question at this point regards the default GRUB installed with RemixOS; I can't seem to find the configuration that's running anywhere. I found a couple of grub.cfg files on /EFI/RemixOS/efi/RemixOS (namely grub.cfg, grub32.cfg, grub64.cfg), but editing any or all of these had no impact whatsoever on my GRUB entries. Would anyone be able to help me either remove the GRUB menu altogether or customize it, at least?
Thanks in advance.
EDIT: if anyone's looking for a similar solution, you'll very likely need to mount your computer's EFI partition like I did - the one that would show up is probably the EFI folder on RemixOS installation files. To do that, I had to look into /dev/block and my partitions were listed as sdaX, so chances are you'll find a similar setup for your computer. Good luck!
UEFI boot uses EFI:/boot/grub/grub.cfg file for the menuentry details - edit this one.
Vioner said:
UEFI boot uses EFI:/boot/grub/grub.cfg file for the menuentry details - edit this one.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I finally managed to find out what I was doing wrong; I assumed a device listed in /storage was my EFI partition, but it turns out it was probably just the EFI folder from RemixOS original installation. I managed to find my EFI on /dev/block/sda1 and editing grub.cfg was spot on.
Thanks for the help, buddy!
GryphonBR said:
Hey guys,
I recently installed RemixOS 3.0.204 on an Acer Alpha Switch 12, and since I'm running it with Windows 10 but I intend to install some Linux flavor later on, I decided to go ahead and use rEFInd for multibooting (there's also the fact that RemixOS' GRUB wouldn't show up anywhere in my system).
My question at this point regards the default GRUB installed with RemixOS; I can't seem to find the configuration that's running anywhere. I found a couple of grub.cfg files on /EFI/RemixOS/efi/RemixOS (namely grub.cfg, grub32.cfg, grub64.cfg), but editing any or all of these had no impact whatsoever on my GRUB entries. Would anyone be able to help me either remove the GRUB menu altogether or customize it, at least?
Thanks in advance.
EDIT: if anyone's looking for a similar solution, you'll very likely need to mount your computer's EFI partition like I did - the one that would show up is probably the EFI folder on RemixOS installation files. To do that, I had to look into /dev/block and my partitions were listed as sdaX, so chances are you'll find a similar setup for your computer. Good luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How is Remix running on your switch 12; does everything work properly?
Ludespeed said:
How is Remix running on your switch 12; does everything work properly?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep, every little thing. The one gripe I've had is when I connect the charger with the computer on standby from Remix OS - not sure what is causing it, but it will reset and I have to do a cold start to get it back to work. But if I take the time to wake it up, connect the charger and then put it back to sleep, no problems.
But other than that, everything is great - sound, WiFi, every port... Oh, one more annoyance - the physical volume keys don't work out of the box. I might be able to get them to, but for now I don't care much about it. And one thing I haven't tried at all is the internal gyroscope, to see if the screen rotates automatically.
Related
Just as the title says, I'm curious if there exists a touch (or hardkey, i.e. volume up/down and windoes key) enabled bootloader.
Currently i have to press arrow keys and enter to select either windows or android.
Is there such a thing? It would be amazing. Id rather not have to stop at the keyboard to boot to an os from grub.
Thanks in advance!
Well .. I had suffered from this problem for longtime and finally I solved by an app called android-x86 installer it's the only way to boot from your Windows tablet without keyboard at last what I ended up with .. so yo have to download an old version I recommend the ALPHA version and install it with android-x86 installer 2.4 UEFI version after finished installing you have to download the latest version of remix OS and extract with 7zip or winrar then replace all file with the same name in folder androidOS that the direction of ALFA you already installed now You can boot with two ways either from settings/update / recovery and then press restart now at advanced startup then after reboot choose "use a device " and last thing chose android OS wait 9 seconds in grub2 an finally the remixOS will boot or by simply choose android OS from boot menu by volume Up/down
Boot solution for XPS 12 9250
Will thank you for this post when my 'Thanks!' get replenished on XDA. I'm still only using windows 10 on this tablet PC.
It is not clear to me is this is dual boot Android/Windows, my understanding is that this particular usage of the Linux grub bootloader only boots to Remix OS which is android. Grub, as you know does have dual boot capabilities, but maybe not yet on the XPS 12 9250.
Sorry, but the instructions are not step-by-step details for me, and I seem to be not smart enough to follow them. Could you point me to a 1..., 2..., 3.... please?
Please update or PM me whenever you feel you have found a better boot solution for our 9250's. I will be most grateful.
namitutonka said:
Will thank you for this post when my 'Thanks!' get replenished on XDA. I'm still only using windows 10 on this tablet PC.
It is not clear to me is this is dual boot Android/Windows, my understanding is that this particular usage of the Linux grub bootloader only boots to Remix OS which is android. Grub, as you know does have dual boot capabilities, but maybe not yet on the XPS 12 9250.
Sorry, but the instructions are not step-by-step details for me, and I seem to be not smart enough to follow them. Could you point me to a 1..., 2..., 3.... please?
Please update or PM me whenever you feel you have found a better boot solution for our 9250's. I will be most grateful.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Grub can chainload the entry just fine. And when using the official tool it auto-adds an entry if it detects Windows is installed, which it will be as it's a windows tool [unless running via wine] it'll add an entry for it.
Without the tool you can do it manually. Personally I have a second easy to access efi partition that I use, if you want to do the same download a partition manager like minitool and confirm that you have 16MB of unallocated space between your efi and C: drive and I'll dig up a post/walk you through the rest tomorrow
HypoTurtle said:
Grub can chainload the entry just fine. And when using the official tool it auto-adds an entry if it detects Windows is installed, which it will be as it's a windows tool [unless running via wine] it'll add an entry for it.
Without the tool you can do it manually. Personally I have a second easy to access efi partition that I use, if you want to do the same download a partition manager like minitool and confirm that you have 16MB of unallocated space between your efi and C: drive and I'll dig up a post/walk you through the rest tomorrow
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Very excited to pursue this, but this week is filled with close family coming here to stay for our only holiday celebration. Will post back here when I get that unallocated space, after creating a backup of the current system. May use Gparted, but will check out minitool as well.
Walk through, dual boot Remix OS + Win10 on XPS 12 9250
@HypoTurtle
Waiting on a second USB-C to USB cable so I can boot a Macrium Reflect flash drive and backup a restorable PC image to an external Hard drive. After I'm sure I can restore this image I'll try to install Remix OS.
This youtube link is straightforward and simple to follow for the dual boot installation process. I've seen many reporting hardware/software issues on the many XDA forum threads branching off of "Remix OS for PC". So obviously one size does not fit all. Compiling and replacing different Linux kernels, editing grub.cfg, initrd.img, system.img, data.img.... The very worse thing on xda forums are ignorant end-user whiners like me who want instant gratification with their perfectly working phone or tablet. This vast forum has so many xda-developers, steeped in code, gaining and sharing trial and error knowledge. So many thousands of threads where xda-developers are taken for granted to lay solutions into end-user's laps. So many of us end-users are oblivious to this baby sitting. I will try the time consuming and painstaking learning curve. The least knowledgeable member on xda-forums should try to learn and not be spoon fed. It is essential, whatever our capacity, to all become developers interested in expanding the usefulness of our devices over and above the limited and constrained manufacturer's parameters.
Why another tutorial?
As I searched the net and XDA for a guide to actually install Remix OS and found nothing that worked for me I decided to share with you guys how I managed to install it in Resident Mode. Writing this from XDA Labs on my PC now... For me I found out that the Remix OS installer is totally useless - with some copying from Remix OS folder to root folder of the created partition and manually adding UEFI entry I managed it to boot in Guest Mode but Resident Mode was still not working (bootloop). This started to make me mad as I tried so many tutorials already...
So I tried Phoenix OS and it seemed at first that this one was much better - no need for adding UEFI boot entry or experiencing Windows boot entry problems and such as it installs GRUB and boots the OS just fine. First entry in GRUB is Windows, second one Phoenix OS. Well, started it and it booted up... finally! Used it, wanted to install an app and ran into a random reboot. After a while I recognized that these random reboots happened quite often and the system was unusable for me. So my idea was just to replace Phoenix OS files with Remix OS files as the booting part was already working... and guess... it worked! You can't choose Guest Mode though, but I think you won't need that at all on your PC.
Best one on this: you won't need to open your BIOS start-menu and can boot up normally, just choose your system in GRUB bootloader which appears automatically without the need to do anything before. I find it quite annoying to hit BIOS button to start Remix OS, don't you too? So if you are able to install but don't like that behaviour this tutorial is also for you!
So here it is...
On which machines does this work?
Should be working on all PCs / Laptops running Windows 10 with GPT and UEFI BIOS. Probably also works on machines with MBR instead of GPT partition table and legacy Bios, quite sure this works also on older Windows versions (7/8/8.1). Just let me know if it works for you or doesn't.
How to install
(1)
- Create an NTFS partition on which you want to install it (right, no FAT32 crap!). It should be at least 32 GB.
If you don't know how just search XDA or Google. There are several Remix OS installing tutorials on YouTube which show how to do that in Windows.
(2)
- Download Phoenix OS 1.0.9 RC
- Download Remix OS or Remix OS Hacked Edition if you like to have root and some tweaks for it.
I used Hacked Edition.
(3)
- Use Phoenix OS installer and install it on your created partition (make sure you got the correct drive letter! I'm not responsible if you don't and lose your data...), don't reboot.
- Open the created partition in Explorer.
Create a folder named RemixOS, move all files from PhoenixOS to RemixOS.
(Obviously Phoenix is based on Remix and expects it's data to be in RemixOS folder. Funny bug. ;D)
- Reboot. Choose Remix OS.
Enjoy the nice, buggy OS. For some this may be just everthing they need. If you're happy and experience no reboots or other bugs you should be just fine and don't have to follow the next steps.
(4)
- Reboot to Windows.
- Unzip Remix OS archive - should be 2 files: Remix OS image and installer. You could safely delete the installer as you won't need it.
Use 7zip or Winrar (or whatever) to extract the Remix OS image file into a folder.
- Move the contents of that extracted folder into the RemixOS folder on your created partition. Overwrite everything. You could also extract the image file directly into RemixOS folder.
(5)
- Reboot. Choose Remix OS.
- Done.
You now should be running a working Remix OS in Resident Mode. Works fine here.
Be nice and hit thanks if I could help you.
Zwulf said:
Why another tutorial?
....
(3)
- Use Phoenix OS installer and install it on your created partition (make sure you got the correct drive letter! I'm not responsible if you don't and lose your data...), don't reboot.
.....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi.
Does that mean that the installation of Phoenix OS erase all the data in that partition?
Regards.
jocaferlo said:
Hi.
Does that mean that the installation of Phoenix OS erase all the data in that partition?
Regards.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure about that, only used it on a freshly formatted partition. Mentioned this just to make sure not to be blamed if it should do so.
There's a few things off with these instructions:
1. PhoenixOS does not use a RemixOS folder
2. PhoenixOS's grub.cfg won't boot any RemixOS version especially x64 - as PhoenixOS is 32bit only.
stock phoenixos grub.cfg
Code:
menuentry 'Phoenix OS' --class android-x86 {
search --set=root --file /efi/PhoenixOS/kernel
linux /efi/PhoenixOS/kernel quiet root=/dev/ram0 androidboot.hardware=android_x86 SRC=/PhoenixOS vga=788
initrd /efi/PhoenixOS/initrd.img
}
Something else is going on here. Perhaps the phoenixOS's grub.efi is being used; but it's using the RemixOS grub.cfg. But I think it's just the RemixOS .efi/.cfg and something just switched the default bootloader to grub2 from WBM
HypoTurtle said:
There's a few things off with these instructions:
1. PhoenixOS does not use a RemixOS folder
2. PhoenixOS's grub.cfg won't boot any RemixOS version especially x64 - as PhoenixOS is 32bit only.
stock phoenixos grub.cfg
Something else is going on here. Perhaps the phoenixOS's grub.efi is being used; but it's using the RemixOS grub.cfg. But I think it's just the RemixOS .efi/.cfg and something just switched the default bootloader to grub2 from WBM
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Maybe, my deeper technical know-how about that is very limited, but I know that it works for me - reproducible. This is just for those like me who tried literally every guide on the net and still none worked. This one probably will. Myself, I find that kind of strange, too and I'm not able to explain why, but it does work. It's just a try and error thing, but for me it works - as already mentioned: reproducible. Got an i7 2nd gen and a X79 Gigabyte Mainboard.
Zwulf said:
Maybe, my deeper technical know-how about that is very limited, but I know that it works for me - reproducible. This is just for those like me who tried literally every guide on the net and still none worked. This one probably will. Myself, I find that kind of strange, too and I'm not able to explain why, but it does work. It's just a try and error thing, but for me it works - as already mentioned: reproducible. Got an i7 2nd gen and a X79 Gigabyte Mainboard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not saying it doesn't work; but what appears to be happening is that the first 'failed' RemixOS installation added things [to efi/esp partition]. And the PhoenixOS install added or replaced something that made the first install work correctly - it could be either the PhOS grub.efi [although that's 32bit] or as simple as it changing your default bootloader.
Download EasyUEFI if you can and see what's in the first partition - I'm just personally curious as to what is going on here.
I'm also using a non-Jide released grub [like Ubuntu users would be - but with a different setup]
HypoTurtle said:
I'm not saying it doesn't work; but what appears to be happening is that the first 'failed' RemixOS installation added things [to efi/esp partition]. And the PhoenixOS install added or replaced something that made the first install work correctly - it could be either the PhOS grub.efi [although that's 32bit] or as simple as it changing your default bootloader.
Download EasyUEFI if you can and see what's in the first partition - I'm just personally curious as to what is going on here.
I'm also using a non-Jide released grub [like Ubuntu users would be - but with a different setup]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sounds very possible... Got EasyUEFI installed but I'm at work atm. Will tell/show you what's in there later this evening when I'm home. The strangest thing I didn't get: original RemixOS booted fine after copying RemixOS folder content to root - but only guest mode worked, not resident. But I mentioned that already in OP. The whole thing would have been a lot easier if I didn't ditch my Arch Linux for RemixOS (for GRUB's sake... ;D), but there were less things to learn...
These instructions didn't work for me, except for the fact that I didn't create a partition. Phoenix would come up as a boot choice but would boot loop.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
This is my first time posting on the website so I apologise ahead of time. I am trying to dual boot my laptop with Remix OS. It is the Asus ROG GL551JW-DS71 (i7 4720hq, 16 gb ram, 1 tb hdd, gtx 960m, windows 8.1, if anything else is needed, let me know). I've done some research and it seems that it might be an issue with my GPU. I've tried putting the "nouveau.modeset =" and what not but I can't get it to load past the "ANDROID [email protected]_x86_64:/ #" I put "DEBUG=1" in the Grub line thing and I took pictures of my screen. I'm not sure what site you guys would like me to use to upload so I'll upload them once someone lets me know. Thanks in advance!
Have you searched for a disable dedicated/discrete graphics in BIOS? You need to disable it, because Remix will not boot with your GTX960M enabled.
If you don't have that option, then I'm sorry but for now you will be able to boot only using software rendering; graphics handled by the CPU. This means a less stable experience and less performance, but it will work 100%
Add this in the kernel grub line:
Code:
androidboot.swrast=1
Sent from mobile
ethansky said:
This is my first time posting on the website so I apologise ahead of time. I am trying to dual boot my laptop with Remix OS. It is the Asus ROG GL551JW-DS71 (i7 4720hq, 16 gb ram, 1 tb hdd, gtx 960m, windows 8.1, if anything else is needed, let me know). I've done some research and it seems that it might be an issue with my GPU. I've tried putting the "nouveau.modeset =" and what not but I can't get it to load past the "ANDROID [email protected]_x86_64:/ #" I put "DEBUG=1" in the Grub line thing and I took pictures of my screen. I'm not sure what site you guys would like me to use to upload so I'll upload them once someone lets me know. Thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try to add "nomodeset" instead of "nouveau.modeset =".
nomodeset might work, but it's highly unlikely.
I've made a guide for these kind of problems today: http://forum.xda-developers.com/remix/remix-os/solution-problems-booting-remix-os-dual-t3466027
Vioner said:
Have you searched for a disable dedicated/discrete graphics in BIOS? You need to disable it, because Remix will not boot with your GTX960M enabled.
If you don't have that option, then I'm sorry but for now you will be able to boot only using software rendering; graphics handled by the CPU. This means a less stable experience and less performance, but it will work 100%
Add this in the kernel grub line:
Code:
androidboot.swrast=1
Sent from mobile
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have looked for that option in my bios and I couldn't find it. I forgot to mention in my original posting that I had my Windows reinstalled with because the hard drive failed. I don't believe that I have the option to boot to the UEFI so I wonder if that has to do anything. I tried putting the "androidboot.swrast=1" code after the kernel line in the GRUB line editor thingy and I got it to boot. It's a bit unstable and the screen tends to tear when I move a large window around. The only problem now is how to make it permanent. I tried editing the file that was mentioned in some guides but it doesn't seem to stick.
tomekumb said:
Try to add "nomodeset" instead of "nouveau.modeset =".
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have tried both of the commands and it still hands at the Android root part. Are there any other commands or combination of commands that could work? I don't have an option in my bios to disable my gtx 960m and there isn't an option to boot to the UEFI. I wonder if the Windows reinstall due to a hard drive failure has something to do with it. Thanks in advance!
Hi XDA community, since I don't have enough power to land this on other forums I choose here.
First, this is my disclaimer:
Please try this at home at your own risk, the steps performed on this guide worked for me and may work for you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
But come on, this is XDA, you will figure it out without problems.:fingers-crossed:
Second, the good thing about this is you only need 3 ingredients:
Old tablet, The HP Stream 7 tablet SPECS
Precious Disk Space :victory:
Sweet Internet
W00t? no USB or Keyboard required? Yes, that's why it took me a while to glue the pieces together. Now, here we go:
I suggest to download PhoenixOS (November Release v1.1.2-226), because it worked for me immediately, I have an issue with RemixOS that I didn't try to fix it yet, I got stuck on the "Select Language" screen, but the steps may work for you.
Now, free disk space on your tablet, I did the upgrade to Windows 10 a while back and I had almost 1GB left on C, that's ridiculous because the drive has 20GB-ish, so, I google (yes, you need to do your homework too because I did the steps on the fly) how to recover space from the greedy Windows 10 OS, I removed a lot of useless info/cache/downloads/apps/etc and even compressed the Windows binaries (yes, you can do that). Concerned about Windows performance? be not, it works faster than ever. After the next steps this may seem useless but free space is free space, you'll need it later on life.
After all that dark magic, I was able to reclaim 10GB-ish, yeah!, but then realized I had 8GB more on the tablet "lost", this is the recovery partition for Windows 10, now, this is something that you may think of because you can get rid of all that info and reclaim what is yours, that partition is for you, but maybe you wont so this is one of these life choices. I did, I don't care about recovery stuff, most of my gadgets have custom ROMs or OSes. Used Minitool Partition Wizard Free and managed to reclaim the precious Disk Space.
Important thing here, some users Shrink the drive C to create a new partition, I didn't, used the 8GB partition instead.
We have Disk Space available, now, we prepare the operations table:
Disable Bitlocker on the drive you want to install the new OS.
Disable Secure Boot, power off the device and press Power+VolDown for a few seconds until you're on the BIOS.
Boot on Windows and install the Android OS flavor you want, I'll split the installation in two because for RemixOS is harder.
NOTE: Remember that grub doesn't support touch and both Android OSes grub have Windows as first OS to boot and kids, there is the key.
PhoenixOS
Download the OS
Extract it and run the installer
Select install to Hard Drive and install it on the Drive desired (I did that on E: which is the 8GB partition).
Restart and let the system do the job, you'll land on Windows again.
In Windows, as you read on the NOTE, we need to change grub.
Open Windows Powershell ISE in Admin mode (yeah yeah, yo can use whatever you want)
Then execute the command
Code:
mountvol B: /s
With this you'll be able to see the contents from the UEFI partition
Now, remember to select view all files, with WPISE open the grub.cfg file located on
Code:
B:\EFI\PhoenixOS\
Put the Windows entry below the PhoenixOS entry, change the grub timeout to 3 or whatever timeout you want, this change is for faster boot, save the file and you're ready to go.
Restart the system, press Power+VolDown -> F9, Select the PhoenixOS, let grub do the magic and you win
Notes about PhoenixOS
Phoenix OS installation, straight-forward on the 8GB partition
Needed to change Grub but friendlier than RemixOS
Keyboard behaves weird, you need to be accurate when using your fingers
When using browser and playing videos the tablet heats up hard
Rotation is wrong, I selected not to use rotation so I can use the UI without problems
Is fast, Wireless work
Something I saw one time is it got stuck when showing my user recently booted, restarted the device and then it worked again.
Video after the break.
Veredict: It works for me and can play with Android in a tablet without the need to buy another.
RemixOS
It supposed to have more support for things but looks like PhoenixOS has more . Not going to start a war here, I always try to find what suits best for me .
RemixOS is a pain on this tablet with the newest November 2016 version, I need to play more and harder.
You do almost the same as PhoenixOS, the installer is easy as well but it shows you an installation issue the first time, you need to restart the device and try the installation again. After that it was a game of try and fail but I sorted out the pieces.
Restart and you'll be on Windows again, well, let the system land on Windows and modify grub, kind of same as PhoenixOS:
Open Windows Powershell ISE in Admin mode
Then execute the command
Code:
mountvol B: /s
With this you'll be able to see the contents from the UEFI partition
Now, with WPISE open the grub.cfg file located on
Code:
B:\boot\grub\
Remember to select view all files
Put the Windows entry below the RemixOS entries, save the file, change the timeout and you're ready to go.
For RemixOS you also need to change the timeout for the theme.cfg file on
Code:
B:\EFI\RemixOS\
Restart the system, press Power+VolDown -> F9, Select the OS Bootloader, let grub do the magic (after some errors, just let it be) and you win (see, no hands mom!), well, sort of because it freezes :silly:.
I'll try to do more tests with RemixOS and see what happens.
Is this guide enough for you, not? blame the Internet or leave your comments.
Enjoy.
Thanks for the info.
I'm not getting any sound with PhoenixOS. WiFi is OK but sound & Bluetooth is not functional. Any suggestions ?
I've experimented with RemixOS as well...... sound works but it's very laggy and touch-screen / rotation is unresponsive. PhoenixOS is very stable and far far better but no sound :crying:
android x86 nougat on hp stream 7
Try this ISO of Android Nougat on the Stream 7, Wifi Bluetooth & Audio work. touchscreen is a little sensitive
Search youtube for HP Stream 7 for a link to the ISO.
I'm not aloud to post links on hear
mlckchip said:
Try this ISO of Android Nougat on the Stream 7, Wifi Bluetooth & Audio work. touchscreen is a little sensitive
Search youtube for HP Stream 7 for a link to the ISO.
I'm not aloud to post links on hear
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Could you please explain the installation instructions?
Any news? I tried newest phoenix, but it´s way too heavy for it. Runs very slow. The older lollipop works better. The touchscreen is more a problem, it´s like a tablet from hell, very bad sensitivity.
The "Trekstor Surftab Xintron i 7.0" should be the same hardware and has android, so there could be a way to install this or at least use the touchscreen drive in phoenix. But I´m afraid of bricking it.
I'm dual booting Remix OS (on my ssd, separate partition) with Windows 10 on my Surface Pro 3. I installed it using the Remix OS Installer (3.0.207). Everything works great but I'd like to have the DPI default to 216. After searching, I know I need to modify the grub file to include DPI=216 and possibly UVESA_MODE=2160x1440. When logged in to Windows, I navigate to my grub file and added the code using notepad++. When I boot to Remix, the scaling doesn't take effect.
I can get it to work if I hit e when booting and adding the code then but I don't want to do it every time. Any ideas on what I may be doing wrong? Thanks in advance.
Not everyone knows SP3 is Surface Pro 3.
You need to modify the EFI(ESP):/boot/grub/grub.cfg file - efi partition is hidden by default.
Google for more please. Can't write a guide now.
Vioner said:
Not everyone knows SP3 is Surface Pro 3.
You need to modify the EFI(ESP):/boot/grub/grub.cfg file - efi partition is hidden by default.
Google for more please. Can't write a guide now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for tip, will do. I appreciate the help.
Vioner said:
Not everyone knows SP3 is Surface Pro 3.
You need to modify the EFI(ESP):/boot/grub/grub.cfg file - efi partition is hidden by default.
Google for more please. Can't write a guide now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I got it figured out and working! Thanks for the tip on the hidden partition.