On 22/02/2016 11:50, Gordan Bobic wrote:
It seems a little odd that the installer would put the kernel somewhere other than the target installation disk. Having UEFI on-board I can understand, but shouldn't the boot sequence in this case be:
- u-boot (on-board)
- UEFI (wherever u-boot can fetch it from)
- grub (off the UEFI FAT partition on the target disk)
- Kernel (/boot partition)
Is there a good reason for deviating from this?
Ok, reinstalling the original u-boot resolves the onboard kernel issue, that is, the board now boots to OpenLinux again when no other devices are attached. So the 'Applied Micro Linux 3.12.0 (aarch64)' kernel is part of their (Gigabyte's) u-boot image.