Tiny Core Extensions > TCE Corepure64
Corepure64 15.0
(1/1)
loid:
Currently I have a laptop with Win10 and Mint 21.3 on it. I need to keep Win10 for Turbo Tax :( ... These both work as expected. Using Mint 21.3 I formatted a usb3.2 drive as ext4, then with Mint created a bootable usb drive with Corepure64 15.0 on it.
Now comes the funky part. My boot menu has usb drive as the initial os if present. The laptop recognizes the TCL os and displays the following.
tc
tce
tcm (this one could be different as I am doing this from memory...)
tcw
and list a grub message at the bottom.
I have selected one at a time all 4 from the list above and get nothing but a blank screen and have to power down to unlock the laptop.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Loid
Leee:
--- Quote from: loid on May 17, 2024, 11:03:05 AM ---Currently I have a laptop with Win10 and Mint 21.3 on it. I need to keep Win10 for Turbo Tax :( ... These both work as expected. Using Mint 21.3 I formatted a usb3.2 drive as ext4, then with Mint created a bootable usb drive with Corepure64 15.0 on it.
Now comes the funky part. My boot menu has usb drive as the initial os if present. The laptop recognizes the TCL os and displays the following.
tc
tce
tcm (this one could be different as I am doing this from memory...)
tcw
and list a grub message at the bottom.
I have selected one at a time all 4 from the list above and get nothing but a blank screen and have to power down to unlock the laptop.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Loid
--- End quote ---
What graphics hardware does your laptop have and what make and model of laptop is it? Through the haze of time, I remember occasionally having laptops behave similarly - I think having to do with whether or not graphics-KERNEL.tcz was loaded. Maybe try using the "text" boot code to prevent it trying to run a GUI and see what happens.
Other than that...
I'm not a Mint user so maybe this is self evident to those who are, but exactly how did you create the bootable USB drive?
Can you post the grub.cfg file from the USB stick and the directory tree layout of the USB stick?
loid:
HP Omen i7
Machine:
Type: Laptop System: HP product: OMEN by HP Laptop 15-dh1xxx v: N/A serial: <superuser required>
Chassis: type: 10 serial: <superuser required>
Mobo: HP model: 8746 v: 04.26 serial: <superuser required> UEFI: AMI v: F.05 date: 05/09/2020
grafics is nVidia GTX 1660
grub.cnf:
if loadfont unicode ; then
set gfxmode=auto
set gfxpayload=keep
set gfxterm_font=unicode
terminal_output gfxterm
fi
menuentry "tc" {
linux /boot/vmlinuz64 loglevel=3 cde vga=791 video=vesafb:ywrap,mtrr:3
initrd /boot/corepure64.gz
}
menuentry "tcw" {
linux /boot/vmlinuz64 loglevel=3 cde waitusb=5 vga=791 video=vesafb:ywrap,mtrr:3
initrd /boot/corepure64.gz
}
menuentry "core" {
linux /boot/vmlinuz64 loglevel=3 vga=791
initrd /boot/corepure64.gz
}
menuentry "corew" {
linux /boot/vmlinuz64 loglevel=3 waitusb=5 vga=791
initrd /boot/corepure64.gz
}
It appears the vga=791 may have to be set to 795.
Do I need to specify parameters with the tc command when the boot screen opens?
Directory structure:
TCL
boot
cde
EFI
With the unmodified folders and files in each subdirectory.
Leee:
If the cde directory is writable, then it should be named tce instead of cde
Is there an onboot.lst file in the cde directory? If so, what does it contain?
I have no (successful) experience with nvidia graphics, so if the issue is related to that, we'll have to tag someone more knowledgeable on the subject.
The more I think of it, the more I suspect it is a graphics issue - otherwise I would expect to at least se some error message from grub before (or instead of) going black.
Maybe try specifying text on the linux line for which ever boot entry you select:
--- Code: ---menuentry "tc" {
linux /boot/vmlinuz64 loglevel=3 cde vga=791 video=vesafb:ywrap,mtrr:3 text
initrd /boot/corepure64.gz
}
--- End code ---
Navigation
[0] Message Index
Go to full version