I guess no one has reported it yet.Hmmm, would for sure be good to fix this.
There is a pull request to fix the problem with booting FreeBSD 15 images from November 2 from this repository: https://github.com/DrBassman/Ventoy.I guess no one has reported it yet.
I guess I would need Centos for that, but I don't know the first thing about it.There is a pull request to fix the problem with booting FreeBSD 15 images from November 2 from this repository: https://github.com/DrBassman/Ventoy.
If you don't want to wait to the official fixed version, you could build it right now, using that repository.
Nothing complicated: https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/linux-unix/how-to-install-centos/I guess I would need Centos for that, but I don't know the first thing about it.
Exactly which 15.0 source did you use? I'd like to try the same one.I reinstalled 15 on my test system (a 15+ years old - BIOS only - no UEFI) using Ventoy and it worked just fine first try, no issues whatsoever. Every once in a while I update my Ventoy installation and I believe I'm now running the latest one.
BTW, to upgrade Ventoy I usually download the latest ISO and boot into that... using Ventoy. Lisp lovers would appreciate it I suppose.
Exactly which 15.0 source did you use? I'd like to try the same one.
[8:21][fmc000@dabrafenib ~]$ ls -l /media/Ventoy
total 46643776
-rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 4464642048 Jul 15 15:00 FreeBSD-14.3-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso
-rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 1556140544 Nov 5 11:58 FreeBSD-15.0-STABLE-amd64-20251030.img
drwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 32768 Feb 3 2024 System Volume Information
-rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 6140975104 Jul 7 2024 Win10_22H2_English_x64v1.iso
-rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 5789712384 Apr 26 2025 Win11_21H2_English_x64.iso
-rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 5734307840 Nov 16 2024 Win11_24H2_Italian_x64.iso
-rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 195706880 Nov 18 18:35 ventoy-1.1.07-livecd.iso
[8:21][fmc000@dabrafenib ~]$
I don't see a 15=RELEASE ISO there.Code:[8:21][fmc000@dabrafenib ~]$ ls -l /media/Ventoy total 46643776 -rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 4464642048 Jul 15 15:00 FreeBSD-14.3-RELEASE-amd64-dvd1.iso -rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 1556140544 Nov 5 11:58 FreeBSD-15.0-STABLE-amd64-20251030.img drwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 32768 Feb 3 2024 System Volume Information -rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 6140975104 Jul 7 2024 Win10_22H2_English_x64v1.iso -rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 5789712384 Apr 26 2025 Win11_21H2_English_x64.iso -rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 5734307840 Nov 16 2024 Win11_24H2_Italian_x64.iso -rwxrwxr-x 1 fmc000 wheel 195706880 Nov 18 18:35 ventoy-1.1.07-livecd.iso [8:21][fmc000@dabrafenib ~]$
I am the one who made that pull request...There is a pull request to fix the problem with booting FreeBSD 15 images from November 2 from this repository: https://github.com/DrBassman/Ventoy.
If you don't want to wait to the official fixed version, you could build it right now, using that repository.
# cp ventoy_unix.cpio /path/to/VTOYEFI/ventoyI'm not sure if I follow you but with the Ventoy ISO you can definitely update the disk you have booted from. That's exactly what I've been doing for years, I have a single Ventoy stick that I update every once in a while.If anyone has an existing Ventoy installation which they want to update, you can do this by copying
to the first partition of your Ventoy disk. This provides an update option. Unfortunately you can't update the disk you have booted from so you need to create a second Ventoy disk but that is simple enough to do using a spare pen stick. You need to select 'Show all devices' to display all attached devices.
Once you have done that copy this and a FreeBSD 15 iso to the first partition of the new device and boot from that so that you can update the original device.
Incidentally when installin Ventoy I always select GPT partitioning and format the first partition as ext4 which is easily mounted from FreeBSD using '-t ext2fs'.
Not sure what you mean by 'normal' partition. Ventoy uses two partitions, one for bootable ISO's etc, the other for its system files. I normally partition the remainder creating numerous partitions, sometimes ten or more and installed various OS's on them.I'm not sure if I follow you but with the Ventoy ISO you can definitely update the disk you have booted from. That's exactly what I've been doing for years, I have a single Ventoy stick that I update every once in a while.
You have to copy the ISO in the normal partition, boot from that ISO and follow the instructions. It will update the code in the other partition to the latest Ventoy release.
Exactly what I was saying. Ventoy can update by itself, so to speak. That's the only way to do it if you don't use neither Windows nor Linux, like myself as I only use FreeBSD.Actually, I just tried that and it does work, so I don't what I must have done before.
Sorry about the confusion.