I have been able to get hold of a new MSI Cubi N. I created a StartOS USB boot disc and on boot up was given the option to install. The M2 disc was offered as a target and installation seemed to proceed normally. I got a message that it had successfully installed and was asked to remove the USB stick and reboot. On rebooting, the PC just went straight to the BIOS screen and I have chosen all the possible boot options but it refuses to boot.
I then had a go at installing Linux Mint and it installed and booted to the disk no problem. I then tried the StartOS again and once again, it refuses to boot to the SSD.
First idea is to be sure you are using the nonfree image, and second would be to wipe the disk and format it GPT/exFAT. Beyond that, it’s possible you need a newer kernel than is currently supported. This would mean you would have to wait for an OS update. What disk are you using?
Yes, you could probably do that. Alternatively, you can use an adapter to plug in the drive to a laptop/desktop.
Please keep in mind you will only be able to install StartOS to one drive at this time, unless you have some kind of lower level hardware/software RAID.
Hi. I tried formatting the disk using a Linux Live stick. Once again, StartOS seems to install OK, but will not boot and the BIOS does not show the SSD (like it did when I installed Mint).
We’ve noticed several that are not supported by the Debian 12 (Bookworm, which is what StartOS is based on) kernel (6.1.0), and will be releasing StartOS v0.3.6 with the next kernel (6.5, assuming testing goes alright) which should support more devices.
OK thanks for your help. Damn, I’m desperate to get a full node up & running - looks like I might have to get umbrel for now, as I can install mint, and I’ll have a go with Start9 when it’s ungraded (which looks to me like a much better solution).
I had this same exact issue. It’s because the start9 developers failed to include any options for creating/modifying the boot partition. What’s worse is the install wipes whatever boot files are there, but does not replace them with anything else. Thankfully the solution is not that hard, just google search “bcdboot”. It’s a built-in windows utility that can copy EFI partition with GPT format that your computer will recognize and boot from. There may be other options out there that do something similar, but this is what got mine working.
Sorry if I sound bitter and snarky. I’m actually quite grateful for the start9 team’s efforts for making this product available. However, their oversight on this boot issue was just super frustrating and a deterrent for me getting started.