Hi!
I am trying to boot Haiku from an USB pendrive I created using balenaEtcher on a Lenovo ThinkBook 14-IIL. I have tried 3 pen drives already, and neither of them worked.
In the BIOS, I tried both Legacy mode and UEFI. In case of Legacy mode, I got a screen with a dash prompt in the upper left, but nothing else happens. If I switch to UEFI, I get a nice boot menu, but it doesn’t seem to find the boot volume for some reason:
Try other USB port, or connect the usb disk via a USB2 hub or try to change the USB settings in your BIOS/firmware or write the Haiku image to your hard-disk via a different OS (warning, it is can cause data loss).
Try using a different tool other than balenaEtcher, something like win32diskimager, balenaEtcher sometimes triggers that error ‘boot volume is not valid’.
I have tried all the USB ports, and changed all the USB settings I could. On another Asus notebook, I could boot Haiku, so this is probably a problem, specific for this computer/type. So potentially, the phenomenon is not caused by balenaEtcher.
Does anybody have any experience with this Lenovo Thinkbook type?
Does your bios have some setting where you need to add drives to be seen by the uefi/secureboot/whatever ? Had one notebook here a couple days ago where this option was need for it to list a disk as bootable.
No, there is no such option in the BIOS. What I tried now is that I mounted the Beta 4 x86_64 ISO to a QEMU virtual machine on Fedora, as well as one of my pen drives, and tried to install Haiku from the virtual machine, following this tutorial: UEFI Booting Haiku | Haiku Project. Now I can’t even reach the Haiku Boot Loader.
I don´t believe it should change things, but can you try recreating the usb drive with another program ? I would suggest rufus, just because it is what I use here.
Thanks for the suggestions! I mentioned in the original post: I have tried Legacy boot as well, then the boot process is stuck at a screen with a dash in the upper left corner. I wonder if I had to write some extra bootloader manually on the pen drive to make it bootable.
I have tried both x86 and x86_64 images, neither of them worked.
Something else to try in EFI mode - move the USB stick to be the first boot device in your BIOS settings - note selecting it from a boot menu is not the same, actually putting it to the top of the boot order works on my PC otherwise it won’t boot. TBH sounds like you have a different kind of issue to me, but probably worth trying it.
I followed the exact steps you suggested. Until now I could boot up Haiku from an USB Stick in QEMU, at the moment it shows exatly the same picture as in my initial post on my physical hardware