Advance-topics/nf9c-bios-for-usb: Difference between revisions

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:NF9C BIOS Setup For USB}}{{TopicAdvancedTopics|float:right}}This is a step by step walkthough on how to setup the BIOS for a Jetway NF9C motherboard to make sure it'd work with Snakeoil.
{{DISPLAYTITLE:NF9C BIOS Setup For USB}}{{TopicAdvancedTopics|float:right}}This is a step by step walkthough on how to setup the BIOS for a Jetway NF9C motherboard to make sure it'd work with Snakeoil.


== Get into the BIOS ==
==Get into the BIOS==
Connect a keyboard and monitor to the computer. And when you turn on the computer, hit these keys multiple times until you see the BIOS screen: F2, F9, F10 or F12. You should see this screen:
Connect a keyboard and monitor to the computer. And when you turn on the computer, hit these keys multiple times until you see the BIOS screen: F2, F9, F10 or F12. You should see this screen:
[[File:BIOS - Main Page.png|center|thumb|583x583px|BIOS - Main Page]]
[[File:BIOS - Main Page.png|center|thumb|583x583px|BIOS - Main Page]]


== Advanced Menu ==
==Advanced Menu==
Press the right arrow to go into the Advanced menu. Make sure these settings are as follows:
Press the right arrow to go into the Advanced menu. Make sure these settings are as follows:
  SATA 3.0 Controller -> Enabled
  SATA 3.0 Controller -> Enabled
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If everything works correctly, you should see your USB live media as a "mass storage device":
If everything works correctly, you should see your USB live media as a "mass storage device":


== Goto Chipset Menu ==
==Goto Chipset Menu==
Hit the right arrow key again to move  to the Chipset menu. And enable only the USB ports you're using (e.g. connected to a keyboard, etc). Turn off any unused USB ports.
Hit the right arrow key again to move  to the Chipset menu. And enable only the USB ports you're using (e.g. connected to a keyboard, etc). Turn off any unused USB ports.
  Azalia codec->disabled
  Azalia codec->disabled
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  UHCI #4 (ports 6 and 7)->enabled
  UHCI #4 (ports 6 and 7)->enabled
  USB 2.0 (EHCI support)->enabled
  USB 2.0 (EHCI support)->enabled
<br />
[[File:BIOS - AHCI Chipset Configuration.png|center|thumb|402x402px|BIOS - UHCI chipset]]


== Goto Boot Menu ==
==Goto Boot Menu==
Next, move to the Boot Menu and adjust the boot option accordingly to your harware.
Next, move to the Boot Menu and adjust the boot option accordingly to your harware.
  Boot Option #1 -> Your USB Device, in UEFI mode
  Boot Option #1 -> Your USB Device, in UEFI mode
  Boot Option #2-> Your USB Device, in BIOS mode
  Boot Option #2-> Your USB Device, in BIOS mode
  Boot Option #3-> Your SSD/CFast Device.
  Boot Option #3-> Your SSD/CFast Device.
[[File:BIOS - Boot Configuration.png|center|thumb|485x485px|BIOS - Boot Configuration]]
Go to the Priorites sub-menu and adjust accordingly until you get it right. The idea is to boot the USB stick in UEFI first, and if that fails, try to boot USB stick normally, and if that fails, boot your SSD/CFast device as a last resort. This is a picture of my seutp which is slightly different. Your BIOS should point to your SSD instead.
Go to the Priorites sub-menu and adjust accordingly until you get it right. The idea is to boot the USB stick in UEFI first, and if that fails, try to boot USB stick normally, and if that fails, boot your SSD/CFast device as a last resort. This is a picture of my seutp which is slightly different. Your BIOS should point to your SSD instead.


== Exit and Save ==
==Exit and Save==
Once you have made the necessary adjustments outlined above, go to the last menu "Save And Exit", save your settings and reboot.  
Once you have made the necessary adjustments outlined above, go to the last menu "Save And Exit", save your settings and reboot.  


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Magic!{{ManualNavigation|[[advance-topics|Advanced Topics]]|[[advance-topics/native-dsd-support|Native DSD Support]]|[[advance-topics/recover-from-a-failed-custom|Recover From A Failed Custom Kernel]]}}
[[Category:Advanced Topics]]

Latest revision as of 09:43, 30 July 2020

This is a step by step walkthough on how to setup the BIOS for a Jetway NF9C motherboard to make sure it'd work with Snakeoil.

Get into the BIOS

Connect a keyboard and monitor to the computer. And when you turn on the computer, hit these keys multiple times until you see the BIOS screen: F2, F9, F10 or F12. You should see this screen:

BIOS - Main Page

Advanced Menu

Press the right arrow to go into the Advanced menu. Make sure these settings are as follows:

SATA 3.0 Controller -> Enabled
SATA Configuration->
   SATA Controller(s)->Enabled
   Configure SATA as ->AHCI
USB Configuration->Enabled
EHCI Handoff->Disabled
USB Transfer timeout->20 s
Device reset timeout->20 s
Device power-up delay->Auto
BIOS - USB Configuration

If everything works correctly, you should see your USB live media as a "mass storage device":

Goto Chipset Menu

Hit the right arrow key again to move  to the Chipset menu. And enable only the USB ports you're using (e.g. connected to a keyboard, etc). Turn off any unused USB ports.

Azalia codec->disabled
UHCI #1 (ports 0 and 1)->enabled
UHCI #2 (ports 2 and 3)->enabled
UHCI #3 (ports 4 and 5)->enabled
UHCI #4 (ports 6 and 7)->enabled
USB 2.0 (EHCI support)->enabled
BIOS - UHCI chipset

Goto Boot Menu

Next, move to the Boot Menu and adjust the boot option accordingly to your harware.

Boot Option #1 -> Your USB Device, in UEFI mode
Boot Option #2-> Your USB Device, in BIOS mode
Boot Option #3-> Your SSD/CFast Device.
BIOS - Boot Configuration

Go to the Priorites sub-menu and adjust accordingly until you get it right. The idea is to boot the USB stick in UEFI first, and if that fails, try to boot USB stick normally, and if that fails, boot your SSD/CFast device as a last resort. This is a picture of my seutp which is slightly different. Your BIOS should point to your SSD instead.

Exit and Save

Once you have made the necessary adjustments outlined above, go to the last menu "Save And Exit", save your settings and reboot.

From this moment on, when you plug in the LiveCD USB stick, your computer will automatically boot into the LiveCD. But after installation and when you remove the USB stick, your computer will boot into your selected SSD/CFast storage instead.

Magic!

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