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rated 0 times [  1] [ 0]  / answers: 1 / hits: 12967  / 3 Years ago, sat, july 17, 2021, 1:40:51

I installed Ubuntu, but when I boot I go straight to Grub rescue command prompt (GNU GRUB version 2.00-19ubuntu2.1). I can get a Grub boot interface by typing:



set root=(hd0,5) 
set prefix=(hd0,5)/boot/grub
insmod normal
normal


And I can then boot into either Windows 8 or Ubuntu. But I really don't want to type that every time I reboot.



For reference: I have a new 2013 Asus Q501L. It had Window 8.0 preinstalled. I shrunk the Windows partition, leaving the other Windows partitions alone, including sda1 and recovery. I installed Ubuntu on the space I created from the shrunken Windows partition.



I have tried the following to fix this:




  1. Boot-recovery (both legacy mode and EFI mode as described here (That is, I get the WinEFI detected message in Boot Repair, but I've tried it both with and without activating the Windows efi inside Boot-Repair). Boot Repair says, when finished with non-efi approach: Please do not forget to make your BIOS boot on sda1/EFI/ubuntustudio/shimx64.efi file!. But in my BIOS, the only Ubuntu boot option is "ubuntu (PO: Toshiba MQ...75).


  2. The instructions here for reassociating grub with the boot
    partition


  3. The instructions
    (Stuck on GRUB Command Line)
    (note, no rep so limited to 2 links) for using the CHROOT method

  4. The instructions here
    to change the Grub record timeout.



In the Grub command line



I really am at a loss. Here is the output from sudo fdisk -l:



Disk /dev/sda: 750.2 GB, 750156374016 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 91201 cylinders, total 1465149168 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes
Disk identifier: 0x5b98f280

Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sda1 1 1465149167 732574583+ ee GPT
Partition 1 does not start on physical sector boundary.


Here is the result from df -Th:



Filesystem     Type      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda5 ext4 92G 6.2G 81G 8% /
none tmpfs 4.0K 0 4.0K 0% /sys/fs/cgroup
udev devtmpfs 2.8G 4.0K 2.8G 1% /dev
tmpfs tmpfs 567M 1.1M 566M 1% /run
none tmpfs 5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
none tmpfs 2.8G 76K 2.8G 1% /run/shm
none tmpfs 100M 24K 100M 1% /run/user


Finally, here is the link to my latest boot-repair attempt: http://paste.ubuntu.com/6573706/



Please help! I don't want to customize my Ubuntu install until this is resolved, because I'm not sure I won't have to wipe everything.



Thank you.



UPDATE:
I installed rEFInd. It worked, but only if I boot from the default/generic variants. I still can't boot from the specific Ubuntu versions that Ubuntu tries to use, as those go straight to the Grub command line.


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 Answers
6

I can get a Grub boot interface by typing:


set root=(hd0,5) 
set prefix=(hd0,5)/boot/grub
insmod normal
normal


And I can then boot into either Windows 8 or Ubuntu. But I really don't want to type that every time I reboot.


That was pretty far already. In your UEFI setup you would have just needed to put that into a grub.cfg next to /EFI/ubuntustudio/grubx64.efi.


This is what the configuration file looks like that reads the actual grub.cfg containing all the kernels:


search.fs_uuid $paste_uuid_here root hd0,gpt2
set prefix=($root)'/boot/grub'
configfile $prefix/grub.cfg

[#27972] Saturday, July 17, 2021, 3 Years  [reply] [flag answer]
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amencisiv

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