If it all goes pear-shaped you may have to reload from scratch. Mucking about with the boot process on your computer can be dangerous. All the gory details follow, bit I will say this as clearly as possible first. The simplest way to permanently achieve this is to copy the Linux bootloader files to the default bootloader directory, and then rename the Linux bootloader to bootmgfw.efi.Getting the computer to boot this by default is the trick. The UEFI-compatible Linux systems I have installed include the grub2-efi boot loader.All of my attempts to change the configuration to get it to boot something else have eventually failed.The UEFI boot systems I have always boot the file bootmgfw.efi from the EFI Boot partition, come hell or high water. For the impatient readers, I will start with a summary: This one is going to be somewhat more technical, and will have a lot less pretty pictures included, so you might want to get a strong cup of coffee before starting, if you are determined to stay awake until the end. Instead, I am going to pick up a thread that I mentioned in each of the previous UEFI Boot posts and I have promised to get back to "real soon now".
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