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Date:      Thu, 28 Jan 2016 16:22:37 +0000
From:      Doug Rabson <dfr@rabson.org>
To:        Tomoaki AOKI <junchoon@dec.sakura.ne.jp>
Cc:        FreeBSD Current <freebsd-current@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: ZFSROOT UEFI boot
Message-ID:  <CACA0VUiwF=40n0TNSfTAnbHY-1xLMytOzeXjnufF%2BoPKRbvBew@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20160129000344.feaf5f828e5d43d5fbbb652a@dec.sakura.ne.jp>
References:  <CALfReyeY3=L9O81AX7xMKj3Ai2DTvBpXtbqepTZc2%2BGEsrT3vA@mail.gmail.com> <8991747525093115430@unknownmsgid> <20160124215300.4cd7f1207f5a4c7b28ef7ffc@dec.sakura.ne.jp> <56A51A4C.1040808@multiplay.co.uk> <20160129000344.feaf5f828e5d43d5fbbb652a@dec.sakura.ne.jp>

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On 28 January 2016 at 15:03, Tomoaki AOKI <junchoon@dec.sakura.ne.jp> wrote:

> It's exactly the NO GOOD point. The disk where boot1 is read from
> should be where loader.efi and loader.conf are first read.
>

I just wanted to note that gptzfsboot and zfsboot behaves this way. Boot1
looks for loader in the pool which contains the disk that the BIOS booted.
It passes through the ID of that pool to loader which uses that pool as the
default for loading kernel and modules. I believe this is the correct
behaviour. For gptzfsboot and zfsboot, it is possible to override by
pressing space at the point where it is about to load loader.



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