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. I agree but the board no longer boots. > Having UEFI on-board I can > understand, but shouldn't the boot sequence in this case be: > > 1) u-boot (on-board) > 2) UEFI (wherever u-boot can fetch it from) > 3) grub (off the UEFI FAT partition on the target disk) > 4) Kernel (/boot partition) > Perhaps it should be. > Is there a good reason for deviating from this? > To be honest, I don't know. To quote the manual, "The system wills entry OpenLinux automatically if no any boot devices exist. (ex. SD card/USB memory stick/SATA hard disk)" and that was the case prior to my attempt to install centos. I'm not bothered about not being able to boot into OpenLinux. I'll try a few more things. -- Mike Howard