Roboknight
Roboknight
That sounds like grub was installed on your hard drive. If you enroll it’s hash in MOK, it should work. However, if you had Bitlocker installed on your Windows partition,...
I forgot to mention that is because now your PCR 7 will have changed if you were using TPM as a protector. Also, above should read hash, instead of has…...
Yes. That is correct. You might be able to remove MOK manager and grub. You will have to restore Windows boot manager. However, if there was a bios update, you...
Btw, are you a victim of a Dell update? Or HP?
So, normally, you’d have to boot into Linux to see the output. If you are seeing bitleaker’s output at boot, that’s good. When you boot Linux, you should be able...
Dell issued an update on some of their BIOSes. When they did this, it was part of an update. Generally, when this is done, there is a way to tell...
I just read back through previous posts. There *COULD* be another issue. This is an issue that can occur with any encrypted system and is one reason I never encrypt...
> 1)I thought the 4 secure boot keys are never changed. however it looks like they are dated Feb 16. probably i have unintentionally installed factory default key in bios....
As a note, I do not know if your hashes are SHA1 or SHA256. Both are out there. I've mostly run across SHA1. kkamagui 's original code was for SHA256,...
Hopefully that list of steps verifies what kkamagui said earlier, if in a more verbose form, because his list is essentially correct, and I think more accurately describes where the...