Grub Grub Grub Error
Contents |
systemHardwareSoftwareDesktopServer & SecurityProject & Community Tools What links hereRelated changesSpecial pagesPrintable versionPermanent linkPage informationBrowse properties User Create accountLog in Toggle navigation PageDiscussion View source more History GRUB Error Reference From Gentoo Wiki Jump grub unknown filesystem to: navigation, search The objective of this article is to list problems grub rescue prompt and errors that may occur in certain situations when using the GRUB Legacy bootloader. All these solutions have been
Grub Rescue Commands
acquired through the cooperation of users on the Gentoo Forums. Contents 1 Starting notes 1.1 Acknowledgements 1.2 Disclaimer warning 2 GRUB loading, please wait... 2.1 Situation 2.2 Solution 3 GRUB Error
Grub Rescue Windows 7
12 3.1 Situation 3.2 Solution 4 GRUB error 15 4.1 Situation 4.2 Solution - Initial configuration 4.3 Solution - Booting an entry 5 GRUB error 17 5.1 Situation 5.2 Solution 6 GRUB error 18 6.1 Situation 6.2 Solution 7 GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB ... 7.1 Situation 7.2 Solution 8 Probing devices to guess BIOS drives. This may take a long time 8.1 grub rescue no such partition Situation 8.2 Solution 9 When installing GRUB, it just hangs 9.1 Situation 9.2 Solution 10 Uncompressing Linux... Ok, booting the kernel 10.1 Situation 10.2 Solution 11 GRUB just shows a GRUB prompt 11.1 Situation 11.2 Solution 12 Could not find device for /boot/boot: not found or not a block device 12.1 Situation 12.2 Solution 13 The system reboots after hitting return at the GRUB menu 13.1 Situation 13.2 Solution 14 After hitting the Enter (Return) key at the GRUB menu, the screen blanks out 14.1 Situation 14.2 Solution 15 Missing GRUB image 15.1 Situation 15.2 Solution 16 Failing To boot Windows from a second hard drive 16.1 Situation 16.2 Solution 17 GRUB segfaults when trying to install 17.1 Situation 17.2 Solution Starting notes Acknowledgements Many thanks to Earthwings, penetrode, loyaltonone, pilla, airhead, nephros, yamakawa and all the others for the suggestions on the original thread. Disclaimer warning The examples provided are just examples. Be sure to change partition numbers and the like according to the specific systems specs. Follow the solutions provided by this document at the readers own risk. GRUB loading, please wait... Situation GRUB loa
communities company blog Stack Exchange Inbox Reputation and Badges sign up log in tour help Tour Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the
Grub Rescue Error
workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack grub rescue normal.mod not found Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Ask Ubuntu Questions Tags grub rescue disk Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Ask Ubuntu is a question and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/GRUB_Error_Reference it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Grub rescue problem after deleting Ubuntu partition! up vote 18 down vote favorite 15 After I deleted Ubuntu partition, I rebooted my computer and got grub rescue problem. What I have tried so far is finding the right partition of http://askubuntu.com/questions/493826/grub-rescue-problem-after-deleting-ubuntu-partition ubuntu from grub rescue command by ls command. It lists (hd0) (hd0,msdos5) (hd0,msdos3) (hd0,msdos2) (hd0,msdos1) (hd1) (hd1,msdos1) Then check them one by one: ls (hd0,msdos5)/ ls (hd0,msdos1)/ But I cannot find the right partition. I will appreciate any advice of you guys on help me to solve this. boot dual-boot grub2 partitioning grubrescue share|improve this question edited Jul 9 '14 at 22:52 No Time 1,057722 asked Jul 9 '14 at 22:06 user302065 91113 Do you have another linux installation on your computer? –Dalton Jul 9 '14 at 22:09 No, just ubuntu 13.04, but dual with win 7 –user302065 Jul 9 '14 at 22:25 And when I tried rebooting by usb or dvd, it said " Error loading operating system" –user302065 Jul 9 '14 at 22:28 It's unclear what you are asking. Please define "right partition" Are you trying to recover a partition that you accidentally deleted? –Elder Geek Jul 9 '14 at 23:53 possible duplicate of How to remove Ubuntu and put Windows back on? –Eliah Kagan Apr 30 '15
Preparation Boot-Repair Search & Set How & Where to Search Specific Troubleshooting grub> grub rescue> GRUB Editing the GRUB 2 Menu During Boot Key Points About Terminal Menu Editing: Menu Editing Examples Post Boot Follow Up Fallback mode GRUB 2 Errors Selected https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2/Troubleshooting Problems and Bugs External Drive Installs and ''grub-pc'' Updates External Drive Installs and MBR Selection Boot Partition is in Logical Volume whose Volume Group contains a snapshot insmod fails with "error: no such disk" Links https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub.html This page provides the user with information on options available for repairing GRUB 2 boot issues and specific instructions on how to use the GRUB 2 terminal. The instructions are written for GRUB 1.99, which grub rescue is the version of GRUB 2 which is included on Ubuntu 11.04, Natty Narwhal, and later. Differences for version 1.98 (Ubuntu 10.4, Lucid Lynx) are noted when the procedures differ. GRUB 2's ability to fix boot problems is greatly improved over the original GRUB bootloader. In addition to an automatic fallback mode if booting from a menuentry in a submenu, GRUB 2 allows the user to edit its menu before the grub rescue no operating system is loaded. The rescue mode GRUB 2 terminal can help boot an operating system so that permanent repairs to system files can be made. The instructions on this page are written for a fully-installed Ubuntu operating system. WUBI boot problems are not covered in detail although they are addressed in several sections. Overview GRUB 2 boot problems can leave the system in several states. The user may see one of the following displays on the monitor when a boot fails. The display provides the first indication of what might be causing the failure to boot. Here are the failure prompts and displays, and the possible cause of each: grub> prompt: GRUB 2 loaded modules but was unable to find the grub.cfg file. grub rescue> prompt: GRUB 2 failed to find its grub folder, or failed to load the normal module. grub>: - The grub prompt on a blank screen. GRUB 2 has found the boot information but has been either unable to locate or unable to use an existing GRUB 2 configuration file (usually grub.cfg). grub rescue>: - The rescue mode. GRUB 2 is unable to find the grub folder or its contents are missing/corrupted. The grub folder contains the GRUB 2 menu, modules and stored environmenta
using grub-install 3.2 Making a GRUB bootable CD-ROM 3.3 The map between BIOS drives and OS devices 3.4 BIOS installation 4 Booting 4.1 How to boot operating systems 4.1.1 How to boot an OS directly with GRUB 4.1.2 Chain-loading an OS 4.2 Loopback booting 4.3 Some caveats on OS-specific issues 4.3.1 GNU/Hurd 4.3.2 GNU/Linux 4.3.3 DOS/Windows 5 Writing your own configuration file 5.1 Simple configuration handling 5.2 Writing full configuration files directly 5.3 Multi-boot manual config 5.4 Embedding a configuration file into GRUB 6 Theme file format 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Theme Elements 6.2.1 Colors 6.2.2 Fonts 6.2.3 Progress Bar 6.2.4 Circular Progress Indicator 6.2.5 Labels 6.2.6 Boot Menu 6.2.7 Styled Boxes 6.2.8 Creating Styled Box Images 6.3 Theme File Manual 6.3.1 Global Properties 6.3.2 Format 6.3.3 Global Property List 6.3.4 Component Construction 6.3.5 Component List 6.3.6 Common properties 7 Booting GRUB from the network 8 Using GRUB via a serial line 9 Using GRUB with vendor power-on keys 10 GRUB image files 11 Filesystem syntax and semantics 11.1 How to specify devices 11.2 How to specify files 11.3 How to specify block lists 12 GRUB’s user interface 12.1 The flexible command-line interface 12.2 The simple menu interface 12.3 Editing a menu entry 13 GRUB environment variables 13.1 Special environment variables 13.1.1 biosnum 13.1.2 chosen 13.1.3 color_highlight 13.1.4 color_normal 13.1.5 debug 13.1.6 default 13.1.7 fallback 13.1.8 gfxmode 13.1.9 gfxpayload 13.1.10 gfxterm_font 13.1.11 icondir 13.1.12 lang 13.1.13 locale_dir 13.1.14 menu_color_highlight 13.1.15 menu_color_normal 13.1.16 net_pxe_boot_file 13.1.17 net_pxe_dhcp_server_name 13.1.18 net_pxe_domain 13.1.19 net_pxe_extensionspath 13.1.20 net_pxe_hostname 13.1.21 net_pxe_ip 13.1.22 net_pxe_mac 13.1.23 net_pxe_rootpath 13.1.24 pager 13.1.25 prefix 13.1.26 pxe_blksize 13.1.27 pxe_default_gateway 13.1.28 pxe_default_server 13.1.29 root 13.1.30 superusers 13.1.31 theme 13.1.32 timeout 1