I had the impression that the extended partition caused the problem, so I decided to delete it and replace it by 2 primary partitions; a root and a swap partition. In the manual partitioning, I deleted the extended partition with its sub partitions. I recreated the root "/" partition, but automatically a second partition has been created with "/boot/efi". I was not happy, because I would loose my swap partition, so I pushed revert and that resulted in the partition table from the photo.
Since when does an existing MBR HDD need a /boot/efi partition?
I had the impression that the extended partition caused the problem, so I decided to delete it and replace it by 2 primary partitions; a root and a swap partition. In the manual partitioning, I deleted the extended partition with its sub partitions. I recreated the root "/" partition, but automatically a second partition has been created with "/boot/efi". I was not happy, because I would loose my swap partition, so I pushed revert and that resulted in the partition table from the photo.
Since when does an existing MBR HDD need a /boot/efi partition?