Change boot order on a Mid 2010 Mac Pro, without MacOS
I have a mid 2010 Mac Pro.
I don't have MacOS installed on it.
Instead I have two separate Debian installs (I've recently upgraded the hard drive to an SSD, but still want to keep the previous hard drive installed)
Currently, the boot order is set so that the hard drive boots before the SSD. I can over ride this on a per boot basis by holding down option (or alt) and selecting the other hard drive.
Unfortunately, I don't know how to permanently change the boot order without a MacOS install.
I have tried:
- Configuring EFI using
efibootmgr
, which gives the error:EFI variables are not supported on this system.
- Removing the boot flag from the hard drive with
fdisk
/gparted
, which does not stop the Mac from booting into the other disk.
boot mac debian efi
add a comment |
I have a mid 2010 Mac Pro.
I don't have MacOS installed on it.
Instead I have two separate Debian installs (I've recently upgraded the hard drive to an SSD, but still want to keep the previous hard drive installed)
Currently, the boot order is set so that the hard drive boots before the SSD. I can over ride this on a per boot basis by holding down option (or alt) and selecting the other hard drive.
Unfortunately, I don't know how to permanently change the boot order without a MacOS install.
I have tried:
- Configuring EFI using
efibootmgr
, which gives the error:EFI variables are not supported on this system.
- Removing the boot flag from the hard drive with
fdisk
/gparted
, which does not stop the Mac from booting into the other disk.
boot mac debian efi
add a comment |
I have a mid 2010 Mac Pro.
I don't have MacOS installed on it.
Instead I have two separate Debian installs (I've recently upgraded the hard drive to an SSD, but still want to keep the previous hard drive installed)
Currently, the boot order is set so that the hard drive boots before the SSD. I can over ride this on a per boot basis by holding down option (or alt) and selecting the other hard drive.
Unfortunately, I don't know how to permanently change the boot order without a MacOS install.
I have tried:
- Configuring EFI using
efibootmgr
, which gives the error:EFI variables are not supported on this system.
- Removing the boot flag from the hard drive with
fdisk
/gparted
, which does not stop the Mac from booting into the other disk.
boot mac debian efi
I have a mid 2010 Mac Pro.
I don't have MacOS installed on it.
Instead I have two separate Debian installs (I've recently upgraded the hard drive to an SSD, but still want to keep the previous hard drive installed)
Currently, the boot order is set so that the hard drive boots before the SSD. I can over ride this on a per boot basis by holding down option (or alt) and selecting the other hard drive.
Unfortunately, I don't know how to permanently change the boot order without a MacOS install.
I have tried:
- Configuring EFI using
efibootmgr
, which gives the error:EFI variables are not supported on this system.
- Removing the boot flag from the hard drive with
fdisk
/gparted
, which does not stop the Mac from booting into the other disk.
boot mac debian efi
boot mac debian efi
asked Dec 9 '18 at 13:09
Joe
1113
1113
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 Answer
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active
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votes
It turns out you can permanently change the startup disk from the startup manager, by holding ctrl
while making a selection.
source
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It turns out you can permanently change the startup disk from the startup manager, by holding ctrl
while making a selection.
source
add a comment |
It turns out you can permanently change the startup disk from the startup manager, by holding ctrl
while making a selection.
source
add a comment |
It turns out you can permanently change the startup disk from the startup manager, by holding ctrl
while making a selection.
source
It turns out you can permanently change the startup disk from the startup manager, by holding ctrl
while making a selection.
source
answered Dec 9 '18 at 14:16
Joe
1113
1113
add a comment |
add a comment |
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