+<p>I know of a small number of pre-packaged versions of rEFInd, either in official OS repositories or in ancillary repositories:</p>
+
+<ul>
+
+<li><b>Arch Linux</b>—You can obtain rEFInd from the Arch
+ repositories, in both <a
+ href="https://www.archlinux.org/packages/extra/any/refind-efi/">stable</a>
+ and <a
+ href="https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/refind-efi-tianocore-git/">git
+ (experimental)</a> releases. The git release is likely to include
+ pre-release bug fixes and new features, but those features may be
+ poorly tested or undocumented. The last I checked, both builds used the
+ Tianocore toolkit, and so support booting BIOS/legacy boot loaders on
+ UEFI-based PCs.</li>
+
+<li><b>The <a href="http://nixos.org/nixpkgs/">Nix Packages
+ collection</a></b>—This site creates packages for a number of
+ OSes using its own packaging system.</li>
+
+<li><b><a
+ href="https://build.opensuse.org/package/show?package=refind&project=home%3Amichael-chang%3AUEFI">OpenSUSE
+ Build Service (OBS)</a></b>—This site holds a binary x86-64 build
+ of rEFInd that should install on any RPM-based distribution. It doesn't
+ completely set up rEFInd, though; it just places the rEFInd files in
+ the <tt>/usr/share/refind</tt> directory, and a copy of
+ <tt>install.sh</tt> as <tt>/usr/sbin/refind_install</tt>.
+ Unfortunately, the script makes assumptions about the locations of
+ files and so is useless when files are moved around in this way. Thus,
+ you'll need to install manually after installing this RPM, so you might
+ as well download the rEFInd binary <tt>.zip</tt> file from Sourceforge
+ instead.</li>
+
+</ul>