This works fine on my Lenovo Thinkserver, but hangs on my Dell Inspiron. ![]() It looks as if the install isos will be using a bad “shim.efi” (see bug 950569). When the isos are available for me to download (on Wednesday), I will compute the MD5 and SHA1 sums, and put them in a comment to this post. ![]() I’ll note that some users might be verifying the download on other systems such as Windows, and may not be able to check sha256 checksums. Look for the line which says that the downloaded iso file is Okay. The “sha256” command is complaining that the PGP signature does not look like a sha256 checksum. The second command will produce some extraneous output, something like “7 lines badly formatted”. The second verifies that the iso you downloaded matches the checksum. The first of those commands verifies that you have the correct “sha256” file, as signed with an opensuse key. If you are not familiar with using “gpg” then skip the first of those commands. To verify the download, use: gpg -verify filename.sha256 The file itself will be signed with a gpg (or PGP) key. This file will contain the sha256 checksum. It will be the name of the “iso” file, with “.sha256” appended. I’m not sure of the actual name, until the download page shows up. There will be a file with name ending in “.sha256”. With Leap, as with recent Tumbleweed isos, it will be a little different. In the past, the download page has had MD5 checksums, SHA1 checksums, and a PGP signature. ![]() So here are a few notes that some readers might find useful. Opensuse Leap 42.1 should be available on Wednesday Nov.
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