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7 <title>The rEFInd Boot Manager: Installing rEFInd</title>
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12 <h1>The rEFInd Boot Manager:<br />Installing rEFInd</h1>
13
14 <p class="subhead">by Roderick W. Smith, <a
15 href="mailto:rodsmith@rodsbooks.com">rodsmith@rodsbooks.com</a></p>
16
17 <p>Originally written: 3/14/2012; last Web page update:
18 5/9/2012, referencing rEFInd 0.3.4</p>
19
20
21 <p>I'm a technical writer and consultant specializing in Linux technologies. This Web page is provided free of charge and with no annoying outside ads; however, I did take time to prepare it, and Web hosting does cost money. If you find this Web page useful, please consider making a small donation to help keep this site up and running. Thanks!</p>
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86
87 <hr />
88
89 <p>This page is part of the documentation for the rEFInd boot manager. If a Web search has brought you here, you may want to start at the <a href="index.html">main page.</a></p>
90
91 <hr />
92
93 <p class="sidebar"><b>Important:</b> A rEFInd zip file, when uncompressed, creates a directory called <tt>refind-<i>version</i></tt>, where <tt><i>version</i></tt> is the version number. This directory includes a subdirectory called <tt>refind</tt> that holds the boot loader, along with another that holds documentation, as well as miscellaneous files in <tt>refind-<i>version</i></tt> itself. When I refer to "the <tt>refind</tt> directory" on this page, I mean the directory with that precise name, not the <tt>refind-<i>version</i></tt> directory that is its parent.</p>
94
95 <p>Once you've uncompressed a rEFInd binary zip file, you must install it to your computer's ESP (or conceivably to some other location). The details of how you to this depend on your OS and your computer (UEFI-based PC vs. Macintosh). The upcoming sections provide details. For Linux and Mac OS X, you can use the installation script, <a href="#installsh"><tt>install.sh</tt>,</a> which provides easy one-command installation on most systems. Occasionally this script will fail, though, so I also provide explicit instructions for <a href="#linux">Linux</a> and <a href="#osx">Mac OS X.</a> Installation under <a href="#windows">Windows</a> also must be done manually. In some cases, you'll have to deviate from the default naming conventions, as described in <a href="#naming">a section on this topic.</a> If you're upgrading rEFInd, see the <a href="#upgrading">section on upgrading.</a> Finally, I describe how to install some <a href="#addons">additional components</a> you might find useful.</a></p>
96
97 <a name="installsh">
98 <h2>Installing rEFInd Using <tt>install.sh</tt> under Linux or Mac OS X</h2>
99
100 <p class="sidebar"><b>Warning:</b> If you're using a Macintosh, you should run <tt>install.sh</tt> from Mac OS X rather than from Linux. If run from Linux, rEFInd is unlikely to be fully installed. Worse, it's conceivable that running <tt>install.sh</tt> from Linux will damage your firmware, requiring that it be re-flashed. The reason is that Apple uses non-standard methods to enable a boot loader, and the Linux functions in <tt>install.sh</tt> assume standard EFI installation methods.</p>
101
102 <p>If you're using Linux or Mac OS X, the easiest way to install rEFInd is to use the <tt>install.sh</tt> script. Under Linux, this script installs rEFInd to your disk's ESP. Under Mac OS X, the script installs rEFInd to your current OS X boot partition by default; but you can install to your ESP instead by passing the script the <tt>esp</tt> option.</p>
103
104 <p>Before running this script under Linux, you should ensure that your ESP is mounted at <tt>/boot</tt> or <tt>/boot/efi</tt>, as described in more detail in the <a href="#linux">Installing rEFInd Manually Using Linux</a> section. (If you installed Linux in EFI mode, chances are your ESP is properly mounted.) This precaution isn't necessary under OS X.</p>
105
106 <p>A sample run under Linux looks something like this:</p>
107
108 <pre class="listing">
109 # <tt class="userinput">./install.sh</tt>
110 Installing rEFInd on Linux....
111 ESP was found at /boot/efi using vfat
112 Copied rEFInd binary file refind_x64.efi
113
114 Copying sample configuration file as refind.conf; edit this file to configure
115 rEFInd.
116
117
118 Installation has completed successfully.</pre>
119
120 <p>The output under OS X is a bit different:</p>
121
122 <pre class="listing">
123 $ <tt class="userinput">./install.sh</tt>
124 Not running as root; attempting to elevate privileges via sudo....
125 Password:
126 Installing rEFInd on OS X....
127 Installing rEFInd to the partition mounted at '/'
128 Copied rEFInd binary file refind_ia32.efi
129
130 Copying sample configuration file as refind.conf; edit this file to configure
131 rEFInd.
132
133
134 WARNING: If you have an Advanced Format disk, *DO NOT* attempt to check the
135 bless status with 'bless --info', since this is known to cause disk corruption
136 on some systems!!
137
138
139 Installation has completed successfully.</pre>
140
141 <p>In either case, the details of the output differ depending on your existing configuration and how you ran the program. Some details that can affect how the script runs include the following:</p>
142
143 <ul>
144
145 <li>If you run the script as an ordinary user, it attempts to acquire
146 <tt>root</tt> privileges by using the <tt>sudo</tt> command. This works
147 on Mac OS X and some Linux installations (such as under Ubuntu or if
148 you've added yourself to the <tt>sudo</tt> users list), but on some
149 Linux installations this will fail. On such systems, you should run
150 <tt>install.sh</tt> as <tt>root</tt>.</li>
151
152 <li>Under OS X, you can run the script with a mouse by opening a Terminal
153 session and then dragging-and-dropping the <tt>install.sh</tt> file to
154 the Terminal window. You'll need to press the Return or Enter key to
155 run the script.</li>
156
157 <li>Under OS X, passing the "esp" option causes the script to install
158 rEFInd to the ESP. The script finds the first ESP that's identified by
159 the <tt>diskutil</tt> program and, if it's not already mounted, mounts
160 it to install rEFInd. Thus, it's conceivable that <tt>install.sh</tt>
161 will install rEFInd to the wrong partition if you have multiple disks
162 or if a disk has multiple ESPs. If you believe this has happened, you
163 may need to re-install manually.</li>
164
165 <li>If you're using OS X 10.7's Whole Disk Encryption (WDE) feature, you
166 <i>must</i> install rEFInd to the ESP, so the <tt>esp</tt> option to
167 <tt>install.sh</tt> is required. I'm still a little bit foggy about
168 what's required to boot the system once this is done; see <a
169 href="https://sourceforge.net/p/refind/discussion/general/thread/5c7d0195/">this
170 forum thread</a> for a discussion of the topic.</li>
171
172 <li>If you're using OS X and an Advanced Format disk, heed the warning that
173 <tt>install.sh</tt> displays and <i><b>do not</b></i> use <tt>bless
174 --info</tt> to check your installation status; this combination has
175 been reported to cause disk corruption on some Macs!</li>
176
177 </ul>
178
179 <p>In any event, you should peruse the script's output to ensure that everything looks OK. <tt>install.sh</tt> displays error messages when it encounters errors, such as if the ESP is mounted read-only or if you run out of disk space. You may need to correct such problems manually and re-run the script. In some cases you may need to fall back on manual installation, which gives you better control over details such as which partition to use for installation.</p>
180
181 <a name="linux">
182 <h2>Installing rEFInd Manually Using Linux</h2>
183 </a>
184
185 <p>On a UEFI-based PC, you'll normally install rEFInd to the ESP, which is usually mounted at <tt>/boot/efi</tt>. You can verify that this is the case by using the <tt>df</tt> command:</p>
186
187 <pre class="listing">
188 $ <b>df /boot/efi</b>
189 Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
190 /dev/sda1 191284 16604 174681 9% /boot/efi
191 </pre>
192
193 <p class="sidebar"><b>Warning:</b> If you're running Linux on a Mac, I recommend you install rEFInd under OS X. The Mac's boot process deviates a bit from EFI standards, so you'll probably have to use a tool called <tt>bless</tt> under Mac OS to do the job. Alternatively, there's a new Linux program, <tt>hfs-bless</tt>, part of the <a href="http://www.codon.org.uk/~mjg59/mactel-boot/"><tt>mactel-boot</tt></a> package, that's supposed to work with <tt>efibootmgr</tt> to make a Mac HFS partition bootable. I've not yet tried it, though. There are also reports that the <tt>efibootmgr</tt> tool used under Linux can corrupt some Macs' firmware. Although I've seen some vague suggestions that this problem has been fixed under 3.<i>x</i> kernels, I haven't tested this claim.</p>
194
195 <p>This example shows that <tt>/dev/sda1</tt> is mounted at <tt>/boot/efi</tt>, which is a typical configuration. (The ESP can be on another disk or partition, but <tt>/dev/sda1</tt> is the most common place for an ESP.) If your output shows <tt>/boot</tt> or <tt>/</tt> under the <tt>Mounted on</tt> column, then your ESP isn't mounted. (An exception is if you're mounting the ESP at <tt>/boot</tt>. This is an unusual configuration. If you're using it, you can proceed, making suitable adjustments to subsequent commands.) If you get a <tt>df: `/boot/efi': No such file or directory</tt> error message, then the <tt>/boot/efi</tt> directory doesn't even exist. In such cases, you may need to jump through some extra hoops, as described on my <a href="http://www.rodsbooks.com/efi-bootloaders/installation.html">EFI Boot Loader Installation</a> page.</p>
196
197 <p>Assuming the ESP is mounted at <tt>/boot/efi</tt>, you can install the rEFInd files as follows (you must be <tt>root</tt> to issue these commands, or precede each of them with <tt><b>sudo</b></tt>):</p>
198
199 <ol>
200
201 <li>Type <tt><b>cp -r refind /boot/efi/EFI/</b></tt> from the <tt>refind-<i>version</i></tt> directory in which the <tt>refind</tt> directory exists. This copies all the files that rEFInd needs to work.</li>
202
203 <li>Type <tt><b>cd /boot/efi/EFI/refind</b></tt> to change into rEFInd's new directory on the ESP.</li>
204
205 <li>Type <tt><b>rm refind_ia32.efi</b></tt> to remove the IA32 binary if you're using an <i>x</i>86-64 (64-bit) system; or type <tt><b>rm refind_x64.efi</b></tt> to remove the <i>x</i>86-64 binary if you're using an <i>x</i>86 (32-bit) system. You can optionally rename the binary you keep as <tt>refind.efi</tt>, but this isn't required. (Note that you must keep the version that's the correct bit width for your EFI; if you've installed a 32-bit Linux on a 64-bit PC with a 64-bit EFI, you'd keep <tt>refind_x64.efi</tt>.</li>
206
207 <li>Rename the configuration file by typing <tt><b>mv refind.conf-sample refind.conf</b></tt>. Consult the <a href="configfile.html">Editing the rEFInd Configuration File</a> page for information on how to adjust your options.</li>
208
209 <a name="efibootmgr">
210 <li>On a UEFI-based system, type <tt><b>efibootmgr -c -l \\EFI\\refind\\refind_x64.efi -L rEFInd</b></tt> to add rEFInd to your EFI's list of available boot loaders, which it stores in NVRAM. (Adjust the path to the binary as required if you install somewhere else.) You may need to install this program on some systems; it's a standard part of most distributions' repositories.</li>
211 </a>
212
213 <li>If other boot loaders are already installed, you can use <tt>efibootmgr</tt> to adjust their boot order. For instance, <b><tt>efibootmgr -o 3,7,2</tt></b> sets the firmware to try boot loader #3 first, followed by #7, followed by #2. (The program should have displayed a list of boot loaders when you added yours in the preceding step.) Place rEFInd's number first to set it as the default boot program.</li>
214
215 </ol>
216
217 <p>Note the use of doubled-up backslashes (<tt>\\</tt>) rather than forward slashes (<tt>/</tt>) in the directory separators when using <tt>efibootmgr</tt>. This command will work on most systems that are already booted into EFI mode; however, it won't work if you're booted in BIOS mode. You may also need to add options if your ESP is in some unusual location or if your system is unusual in some way. Consult the <tt>efibootmgr</tt> man page if you need help.</p>
218
219 <p>On some systems, <tt>efibootmgr</tt> won't do what you expect. On such systems, you may have better luck renaming the rEFInd files, as described in the <a href="#naming">Alternative Naming Options</a> section.</p>
220
221 <a name="osx">
222 <h2>Installing rEFInd Manually Using Mac OS X</h2>
223 </a>
224
225 <p>Before installing rEFInd on a Mac, you must determine whether it uses a 32-bit or 64-bit EFI implementation. Most Intel-based Macs have 64-bit EFIs, so you should use the <tt>refind_x64.efi</tt> file with them; but very early Intel-based Macs have 32-bit EFIs (and sometimes 32-bit CPUs), which require the <tt>refind_ia32.efi</tt> file. You can determine whether your Mac needs the <i>x</i>86-64 or IA32 build by typing the following command in a Mac Terminal window:</p>
226
227 <pre class="listing">
228 $ <b>ioreg -l -p IODeviceTree | grep firmware-abi</b>
229 </pre>
230
231 <p>The result should include either <tt>EFI32</tt> or <tt>EFI64</tt>, indicating that you should use the <tt>refind_ia32.efi</tt> or <tt>refind_x64.efi</tt> binary, respectively.</p>
232
233 <p class="sidebar"><b>Warning:</b> Numerous rEFIt bug reports indicate disk corruption problems on disks over about 500 GiB. <a href="https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&aid=3218104&group_id=161917&atid=821764">This</a> report on the problem, and particularly the post by mic-marchen, suggests that the problem is related to a bug in OS X's <tt>bless</tt> utility, and particularly its <tt>--info</tt> option, that causes it to corrupt data on disks with 4 KiB sectors. These <i>Advanced Format</i> disks are becoming increasingly common, particularly at larger disk sizes. Therefore, I <i>strongly</i> recommend that you <i>not</i> type <tt class="userinput">sudo bless --info</tt> to check the status of your installation if you have such a disk, or even if you suspect you might have such a disk. (I've seen Advanced Format disks as small as 320 GB.)</p>
234
235 <p>The procedure for installing rEFInd on a Mac is similar to that for installing it under Linux, except that you can (and probably should) install it to OS X's system partition or some other HFS+ partition rather than to the ESP, and you must use the <tt>bless</tt> utility rather than <tt>efibootmgr</tt>. To be precise, you should follow these steps:</p>
236
237 <ol>
238
239 <li>Open a Terminal window in which you'll type the following
240 commands.</li>
241
242 <li>If you want to install rEFInd on your ESP, you must first mount it. You
243 can do this by typing <b><tt>mkdir /Volumes/esp</tt></b> followed by
244 <b><tt>sudo mount -t msdos /dev/disk0s1 /Volumes/esp</tt></b>. Note
245 that this step is usually optional, and it makes the procedure a bit
246 more complex, so you might want to forego it. On the other hand,
247 installing to the ESP is required if you're using the whole-disk
248 encryption feature of OS X 10.7. Note that you may need to change
249 <tt>/dev/disk0s1</tt> to something else if your ESP is at an unusual
250 location. Use a tool such as my <a
251 href="http://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk/">GPT fdisk (<tt>gdisk</tt>)</a>
252 to examine your partition table to find your ESP if necessary.</li>
253
254 <li>Type <b><tt>sudo mkdir -p /efi/refind</tt></b> to create a suitable
255 directory for rEFInd. If you want to place rEFInd on the ESP or some
256 other partition, you should adjust the pathname appropriately, as in
257 <tt>/Volumes/esp/efi/refind</tt>. Alternatively, you can use the Finder
258 to create the directory.</li>
259
260 <li>Copy the files in the <tt>refind</tt> subdirectory of the rEFInd binary
261 package to the like-named directory you've just created. You can do
262 this in the Finder or by typing <b><tt>sudo cp -r refind/*
263 /efi/refind/</tt></b> in your Terminal window after changing into the
264 rEFInd package's main directory.</li>
265
266 <li>Remove the file for the version of rEFInd you're not using, as in
267 <b><tt>sudo rm /efi/refind/refind_ia32.efi</tt></b> on a Mac with a
268 64-bit EFI or <b><tt>sudo rm /efi/refind/refind_x64.efi</tt></b> on a
269 Mac with a 32-bit EFI.</li>
270
271 <li>If this is your first installation, type <b><tt>sudo mv
272 /efi/refind/refind.conf-sample /efi/refind/refind.conf</tt></b>
273 (adjusting the path as necessary) to rename the sample configuration
274 file so that it will serve as a real configuration file. (Again, you
275 can do this with the Finder, if you prefer.)</li>
276
277 <li>"Bless" rEFInd by typing one of the following two commands:
278 <ul>
279 <li>If you're installing rEFInd to an ordinary HFS+ volume, type <tt
280 class="userinput">sudo bless --setBoot --folder /efi/refind --file
281 /efi/refind/refind_x64.efi</tt>. (Adjust the path and filename as
282 necessary if you're placing rEFInd somewhere else or using the
283 32-bit version.)</li>
284 <li>If you're installing rEFInd on the ESP, type <tt
285 class="userinput">sudo bless --mount /Volumes/esp --setBoot --file
286 /Volumes/esp/efi/refind/refind_x64.efi</tt>, adjusting the mount
287 point and exact path to the file as appropriate for your
288 installation.</li>
289 </ul>
290 As per the Warning earlier, <i>do not</i> use <tt>bless</tt>'s
291 <tt>--info</tt> option to try to confirm the change to the boot status
292 unless you're certain you do <i>not</i> have an Advanced Format hard
293 disk.</li>
294
295 </ol>
296
297 <p>When you reboot, your Mac should bring up the rEFInd menu, and should continue to do so thereafter. If you make changes that break this association, you can re-run the <tt>bless</tt> command (if necessary, restoring the rEFInd files first). This might be necessary after installing system updates from Apple or if you upgrade rEFInd to a newer version.</p>
298
299 <p>If you're replacing rEFIt, you may discover that rEFInd works on the first boot, but the system reverts back to rEFIt or a direct boot to OS X on the second boot. To fix this problem, you can remove the rEFItBlesser program, which is located at <tt>/Library/StartupItems/rEFItBlesser</tt>. This program attempts to keep rEFIt set as the default boot loader, but it also has the purpose of protecting the computer from launching the wrong OS after waking from sleep. If you want that protection, my suggestion is to install rEFIt and rEFItBlesser and then replace the <tt>refit.efi</tt> file with <tt>refind_x64.efi</tt> or <tt>refind_ia32.efi</tt> (renaming it to <tt>refit.efi</tt>. Used in this way, rEFInd will still look for its own configuration file, <tt>refind.conf</tt>, so you'll need to move it but <i>not</i> rename it. If you don't move the icons from the rEFInd package, your icons will continue to look like rEFIt icons, and you'll be missing the new icons for specific Linux distributions that rEFInd provides. One final caveat: It's conceivable that rEFItBlesser is what's causing filesystem corruption for some users, so if you've been having this problem with rEFIt, it might be worth disabling this program and not using it with rEFInd.</p>
300
301 <p>If you want to remove rEFInd from your system, you can delete its files. The Mac will revert to booting using whatever standard boot loader it can find. Alternatively, you can use <tt>bless</tt> to bless another EFI boot loader. The GUI Startup Disk utility in System Preferences provides a simplified interface that enables you to select which OS X installation to boot, but it doesn't look for non-Apple boot loaders, so you can't use it to enable rEFInd.</p>
302
303 <a name="windows">
304 <h2>Installing rEFInd Manually Using Windows</h2>
305 </a>
306
307 <p>To install rEFInd under Windows, you must first find a way to access the ESP, which Windows normally hides from view. One way to accomplish this goal, and to proceed forward once the ESP is accessible, is as follows:</p>
308
309 <ol>
310
311 <li>Locate Command Prompt in the Start menu, right-click it, and select Run as Administrator. This action opens a Command Prompt window with administrative privileges.</li>
312
313 <li>Type <b><tt>mountvol S: /S</tt></b> in the Administrator Command Prompt window. This makes the ESP accessible as drive <tt>S:</tt> from that window. (You can use a drive identifier other than <tt>S:</tt> if you like.)</li>
314
315 <li>Change into the main rEFInd package directory, so that the <tt>refind</tt> subdirectory is visible when you type <b><tt>dir</tt></b>.</li>
316
317 <li>Type <b><tt>xcopy /E refind S:\EFI\refind\</tt></b> to copy the <tt>refind</tt> directory tree to the ESP's <tt>EFI</tt> directory. If you omit the trailing backslash from this command, <tt>xcopy</tt> will ask if you want to create the <tt>refind</tt> directory. Tell it to do so.</li>
318
319 <li>Type <b><tt>cd S:</tt></b> to change to the ESP.</li>
320
321 <li>Type <b><tt>cd EFI\refind</tt></b> to change into the <tt>refind</tt> subdirectory</li>
322
323 <li>Type <b><tt>del refind_ia32.efi</tt></b> to delete the unused 32-bit version of rEFInd. (Windows only supports EFI boots on 64-bit EFI implementations and in 64-bit versions of Windows.)</li>
324
325 <li>Type <b><tt>rename refind.conf-sample refind.conf</tt></b> to rename rEFInd's configuration file.</li>
326
327 <li>Type <b><tt>bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path \EFI\refind\refind_x64.efi</tt></b> to set rEFInd as the default EFI boot program. Note that <tt>{bootmgr}</tt> is entered as such; that's not a notation for a variable.</li>
328
329 <li>If you like, type <b><tt>bcdedit /set {bootmgr} description "<i>rEFInd description</i>"</tt></b> to set a description (change <tt><i>rEFInd description</i></tt> as you see fit).</li>
330
331 </ol>
332
333 <p>At this point, when you reboot, rEFInd should appear as your new default boot program. One caveat: My only EFI Windows installation uses UEFI DUET, which "forgets" its boot options upon reboot. Thus, I'm unable to test the last two steps (which were provided by a helpful user) myself. If it doesn't work for you, you have several other options, such as:</p>
334
335 <ul>
336
337 <li>You can rename files on the ESP. as described in the next section, <a href="#naming">Alternative Naming Options.</a></li>
338
339 <li>You can boot from an optical disc into an emergency OS to do the job. Ubuntu, for instance, provides an EFI-bootable installer with a "try before installation" mode. You'll need to type <b><tt>sudo apt-get install efibootmgr</tt></b> to install <tt>efibootmgr</tt>, but you can then use that program as described <a href="#efibootmgr">earlier</a>. (If you're using Ubuntu, you'll need to precede the command with <b><tt>sudo</tt></b>.</li>
340
341 <li>You may be able to use rEFInd's bootable CD image to use rEFInd to boot an OS that's been installed but rendered inoperable because of changes to your boot order. You can then use <tt>efibootmgr</tt>, <tt>bless</tt>, or some other tool to restore rEFInd as the default boot loader.</li>
342
343 </ul>
344
345 <a name="naming">
346 <h2>Alternative Naming Options</h2>
347 </a>
348
349 <p>Some EFI implementations do a poor job of honoring the boot options set via Linux's <tt>efibootmgr</tt> or other tools. You may also lack access to such utilities, such as if you must install rEFInd in Windows. In such cases, you may need to change the boot loader's name so that the EFI will see it as the default boot loader. rEFInd should then boot when your NVRAM lacks information on specific boot loaders to use. To do this, follow these steps:</p>
350
351 <ol>
352
353 <li>Access your ESP and install rEFInd to it, as described in earlier sections.</li>
354
355 <li>Look for an existing directory called <tt>EFI/BOOT</tt> or <tt>EFI/Microsoft/BOOT</tt>. If neither of these directories exist, skip the next step. (Note that FAT is case-insensitive, so the name may vary in case.)</li>
356
357 <li>Rename the existing directory or boot loader file to something else. For <tt>EFI/BOOT</tt>, try renaming it to <tt>EFI/Oldboot</tt>. For <tt>EFI/Microsoft/BOOT</tt>, move or rename the <tt>bootmgfw.efi</tt> file it contains. For instance, you can move it to <tt>EFI/Microsoft</tt>. This will keep the boot loader accessible to rEFInd's menu, while preventing the firmware from launching it automatically.</li>
358
359 <li>Rename/move your <tt>EFI/refind</tt> directory to <tt>EFI/BOOT</tt>. If you're working from <tt>EFI/Microsoft/BOOT</tt>, you should move the contents of your rEFInd directory to <tt>EFI/Microsoft/BOOT</tt>.</li>
360
361 <li>Rename <tt>EFI/BOOT/refind_x64.efi</tt> to the name of the boot loader it's replacing&mdash;it should become <tt>EFI/BOOT/bootx64.efi</tt> or <tt>EFI/Microsoft/BOOT/bootmgfw.efi</tt>.</li>
362
363 </ol>
364
365 <p>When you reboot, rEFInd should come up. With any luck, it will detect your old boot loader as an option, if one was installed before.</p>
366
367 <a name="upgrading">
368 <h2>Upgrading rEFInd</h2>
369 </a>
370
371 <p>If you've installed an earlier version of rEFInd, you can upgrade a bit more easily than you can install directly:</p>
372
373 <ul>
374
375 <li>On a UEFI-based PC, under any OS, you should be able to replace your
376 old rEFInd file with the new one. Make sure that the new rEFInd has the
377 same name as the old one, and that it's for the correct CPU type. Since
378 UEFI launches boot programs by filename, a simple file replacement will
379 suffice to launch the new version. If the new version includes new
380 icons, you may want to copy some or all of them.</li>
381
382 <li>On a Mac, you can copy over the old rEFInd binary file <i>from
383 Linux</i> and it will usually work, provided you copy <i>directly</i>
384 over the old file (rather than rename or delete the old file and then
385 copy the new one in its place). The same caveats about icons as apply
386 to UEFI-based PCs apply in this case. This method requires an extra
387 step in Mac OS X, though....</li>
388
389 <li>In OS X, if you copy over the original file with the new one, you'll
390 probably have to re-bless it to make it work.</li>
391
392 <li>Under Linux or OS X, you can re-run the <tt>install.sh</tt> script. In
393 most cases this works fine, but you'll end up with a duplicate of the
394 icons directory (<tt>icons-backup</tt>, which holds the original icons,
395 whereas <tt>icons</tt> holds the icons from the new package). Normally
396 this just wastes some disk space; but if you've customized your icons,
397 you'll need to copy your altered icons back.</li>
398
399 </ul>
400
401 <p>In all cases, if the new version includes new or altered configuration file options, you may need to manually update your configuration file. Alternatively, if you've used the default configuration file, you can replace your working <tt>refind.conf</tt> with <tt>refind.conf-sample</tt> from the rEFInd zip file. (When using <tt>install.sh</tt>, this file will be copied to rEFInd's installation directory under its original name, so you can rename it within that directory to replace the old file.</p>
402
403 <a name="addons">
404 <h2>Installing Additional Components</h2>
405 </a>
406
407 <p>rEFInd includes the ability to launch any EFI program; however, rEFInd detects only certain programs. These include boot loaders in traditional locations and a handful of other programs. To launch these other programs, you must download and install them separately from rEFInd:</p>
408
409 <ul>
410
411 <li><b><a href="http://tianocore.git.sourceforge.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=tianocore/edk2;a=blob_plain;f=EdkShellBinPkg/FullShell/X64/Shell_Full.efi;hb=HEAD">shell.efi</a></b>&mdash;This
412 file, placed in the ESP's <tt>efi/tools</tt> directory, adds the
413 ability to launch a text-mode EFI shell from rEFInd. Note that the
414 download link is to a 64-bit binary that must be renamed before rEFInd
415 will recognize it.</li>
416
417 <li><b>gptsync.efi</b>&mdash;This program creates a <a
418 href="http://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk/hybrid.html">hybrid MBR</a> from
419 your regular GPT disk. A hybrid MBR is a dangerous hack that enables
420 Windows and OS X to coexist on a Macintosh disk. If you're using a
421 UEFI-based PC, a hybrid MBR will be useless at best, so you shouldn't
422 create one, and it's safest to not install <tt>gptsync.efi</tt>. If
423 you're using a hybrid MBR to enable dual-booting Windows and OS X on a
424 Mac, though, placing this program file in the ESP's or Mac boot
425 partition's <tt>efi/tools</tt> directory will enable you to regenerate
426 your hybrid MBR should some other tool convert the MBR to a standard
427 protective MBR. You can obtain the file from the <a
428 href="http://refit.sourceforge.net">original rEFIt package.</a></li>
429
430 <li><b>Drivers</b>&mdash;You can install drivers to extend the capabilities
431 of the EFI. Most notably, filesystem drivers for ext2fs and ReiserFS
432 are available. These can enable you to boot a Linux kernel with EFI
433 stub support from an ext2fs, ext3fs, or ReiserFS partition. See the <a
434 href="drivers.html">Using EFI Drivers</a> page for more on this
435 topic.</li>
436
437 </ul>
438
439 <p>I've seen links to other versions of these tools from time to time on the Web, so if you try one of these programs and it crashes or behaves strangely, try performing a Web search; you may turn up something that works better for you than the one to which I've linked.</p>
440
441 <hr />
442
443 <p>copyright &copy; 2012 by Roderick W. Smith</p>
444
445 <p>This document is licensed under the terms of the <a href="FDL-1.3.txt">GNU Free Documentation License (FDL), version 1.3.</a></p>
446
447 <p>If you have problems with or comments about this Web page, please e-mail me at <a href="mailto:rodsmith@rodsbooks.com">rodsmith@rodsbooks.com.</a> Thanks.</p>
448
449 <p><a href="index.html">Go to the main rEFInd page</a></p>
450
451 <p><a href="using.html">Learn how to use rEFInd</a></p>
452
453 <p><a href="http://www.rodsbooks.com/">Return</a> to my main Web page.</p>
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