I will go through the links guys, thanks a lot.. And Yi Zheng, me neither like UEFI, but what to do, nowadays all laptops comes as UEFI.. and to change it to MBR i have to wipe the entire drive :( On Mon, 27 May 2019, 12:31 pm Yi Zheng via arch-general, < arch-general@archlinux.org> wrote:
I hate UEFI...................
Ali Emre Gülcü via arch-general <arch-general@archlinux.org> 于2019年5月27日周一 下午2:41写道:
create a USB-Key, install extlinux onto it. In extlinux.conf, you can provide kernel cmdline, with root=UUID=xxx-xxx-xxx-xxx In that way, you can boot your archlinux(and any other linux) from USB,
using your main HDD(partition) as the rootfs.
Note, every time you update the kernel, you must copy the updated vmliuz
and +
initramfs.img into you USB disk.
That is not a LIVE USB-Key, it just an bootable kernel + initramfs. Not a completed OS.
You can do that just in case but I don't think it will be necessary. I am using Arch for years now in 3 different UEFI computers with Windows 10. Just follow the installation guide and boot loader wiki page. Just like Jason and Artur linked, wiki warns you for possible problems before you face them and suggests fixes. In case you wonder, I am using systemd-boot with (almost) default configs. Never used GRUB with Arch but it doesn't cause any problems on other Linux distros (at least for me) with Windows 10 dual boot so it is a safe bet too.