Note: For EFI-mode, it seems not as easy to do, as EasyBCD can't do it, but seems as tho the slightly more complicated Grub2win is needed, and I haven't tried that yet.
A little background first...
If you have a windows-pc new enough that it came with windows10, windows usually requires EFI mode to boot. EasyBCD cannot add iso-files to the windows boot menu in this case. That is, If you install and run EasyBCD on such a pc, it says:
If you have a pc that came with windows7 or earlier, even if updated to win8/10, it still likely boots windows in MBR mode, (that is, without EFI mode). And in this case, EasyBCD can add most Porteus live-cd iso files to the windows boot menu, I had to do some tricks below to get EasyBCD to boot Porteus-Kiosk.iso file on the internal HD/SSD, that is, without needing to burn a cd or use a usb-stick.EasyBCD has detected that your machine is currently booting in EFI mode. Due to limitations set by Microsoft, many of EasyBCD's multi-booting features [i.e. grub2 and iso-file booting] cannot be used in EFI mode and have been disabled
Using EasyBCD to add it to the menu, I then booted from the c:\Porteus-Kiosk-Cloud-4.9.0-x86_64.iso file, and could run the kiosk-wizard and save the custom Porteus-Kiosk.iso to a usb-stick. I copied Porteus-Kiosk.iso back to c:\ and added it as boot-item with EasyBCD. When I select it to boot from, grub2 loads the iso, and starts to boot (initrd or vmlinuz I think), but then displayed an error message something like "unable to find kiosk config", and counted down from 30 to reboot. (Not all iso files can be booted by EasyBCD/grub2, and I suspect this one cannot because it is a hybrid iso file. But it can be made to boot with a trick.
The trick to boot from the Porteus-Kiosk.iso works only if you can create a new1gig partition. (Note: an MBR disk can have only 4 primary partitions, and if you already have 4, there are ways to remove the first small "System Reserved" partition if you are not using bitlocker: see [https://www.terabyteunlimited.com/kb/article.php?id=409][/https://www.terabyteunlimited.com/kb/article.php?id=409]
You can shrink by 1gig (1000 mb) one of the existing partitions, like C-drive, In windows with disk manager: start -> cmd -> right-click "run as admin", diskmgmt.msc You can create a new 1gig partition as well.
Next, boot into linux, and be sure to correctly identify the partition number of the new 1gig partition (with fdisk -k /dev/sda or gparted): it might be any one of these: /dev/sda3, /dev/sda4, or /dev/sda5: just make absolutely sure you know which one identifies the empty 1gig partition cause the next step wipes it out!
Plug-in the usb-stick with Porteus-Kiosk.iso on it. It will likely mount at /mnt/sdb1 or /media/sdb1 or similar (use df -h to see where it mounted). Let us assume /media/sdb1/ in next step.
Open a terminal, and do these commands to clone the iso to sda3
Code: Select all
sudo su
dd if=/media/sdb1/Porteus-Kiosk.iso of=/dev/sda3
This trick may not be needed if Grub2Win is used instead of EasyBCD: I'll update this post once I have tried it.
BTW, EasyBCD no longer seems to be free since about version 2.4, but you may still be able to find a 2.3 installer. I have used it for years to add live-linux iso files to windows boot menu in a trivially easy manner. Even on new pcs using EFI, you can still create a "RECOVERY" usb-stick, and use EasyBCD to edit \boot\BCD on the usb stick. Then you can live-linux iso files to windows-boot-menu on the usb-stick: you just temporarily have to switch the boot mode in bios to non-EFI, and select the usb-stick to boot from. When done, go in bios and switch boot mode back to EFI so you can boot windows as usual from hard-drive.
Hope this helps. Let me know if you need any further info if interested in trying this. I may put a more detailed howto up on github for example.