Old dogs and new tricks springs to mind. I am building a new PC and what with UEFI, APUs and SSDs, it feels like that the world has moved a long way since the last time I had to install gentoo. I'll be taking my time to google, read and make appropriate selections, so please bear with me while I start relevant threads as necessary to complement my sparse knowledge in these topics. Starting from the top, with this thread I am trying to find out what is considered good practice as far as UEFI/MBR and boot management goes. The MoBo is capable of booting in CMS mode, but I am not sure if there are any benefits in creating a 2MB partition for a conventional MBR bootloader, or I should forego MBR altogether and go directly with a GPT FAT32 EFI System Partition (ESP). If the latter is the way to go and I forget all things I ever learned about MBR, does the 550MB FAT32 ESP partition have to be at the beginning of the drive? Is it beneficial to install a Linux boot loader/manager like GRUB2, or rEFInd, etc., or should I just use the kernel EFI Boot Stub to boot gentoo with? The PC will single boot in Gentoo, although I may drop in a sysrescuecd image for recovery purposes and would be nice to be able to boot this straight off the disk, without having to burn it on a CDROM. Is it simply a matter of adding the LiveCD iso in the ESP with a .efi suffix, or will I need to use efibootmgr to inform the UEFI about *any* kernel images in the ESP other than the default EFI/BOOT/bootx64.efi? Finally, what's your opinion on 'secure boot'? I'm mostly thinking of its benefit as a pre-boot malware protection utility, but I don't want to introduce too much complexity which may make recovery of my data difficult in the future. I've heard some horror stories resulting from NVRAM corruption, or flashing with new UEFI firmware rendering the PC unbootable, etc. but don't know if this is due to user error. If you have experience using secure boot what is your preferred method? Any other pointers and gotchas I should be careful with? -- Regards, Mick