I’m in a really weird situation, yesterday I installed Linux (Fedora Kinoite) on my mothers laptop (An old Asus F550C) and it worked perfectly fine. Great! Or so I thought.

We needed a few files from Windows 10, so I put that drive in, put the files on a USB stick, put the Linux drive back in and… Nothing? It recognizes the drive, but not the Linux boot option. I put the drive in my pc and it works fine, the boot drive is also still detected in the laptop just fine.

What the hell could it be??

  • The laptop is fine (Windows drive works perfectly)
  • The drive is recognized in bios (But not the boot option)
  • The drive works fine in my desktop and can boot to Fedora
  • The laptop can boot to the USB drive I used to create the install
  • Yesterday it worked just fine
  • I went through the bios, but can’t find any settings related to this (Secure boot did not fix it)

Update: the issue is solved! Windows somehow wiped the efiboot entry.

I mounted the drive from a live usb and ran

sudo efibootmgr --create --disk /dev/sda --part 1 --label “Fedora” --loader ‘\EFI\fedora\shimx64.efi’

After rebooting, the system works again!

  • non_burglar@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I’ve dealt with something similar to this on a lenovo ideapad.

    The BIOS picks up UEFI info from windows and messes up the boot config and order. I solved it by using grub2 rescue, booting to the correct Linux entry and using grub to update UEFI and write the config correctly again.

    Super pain in the a**.

    • EddoWagt@feddit.nlOP
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      2 hours ago

      This ended up being the issue! Booted up a live USB, mounted the disk and ran

      sudo efibootmgr --create --disk /dev/sda --part 1 --label “Fedora” --loader ‘\EFI\fedora\shimx64.efi’

      After rebooting it worked again!

      Now to never plug a windows drive into that PC again…

  • muhyb@programming.dev
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    19 hours ago

    I feel like this is somehow related to Windows 10 not being really shut down when you shutdown. Try restarting Windows, and while before it gets pass BIOS, interrupt and shut down there. Then replace the drives and try to boot Linux again.

    • Redkey@programming.dev
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      18 hours ago

      This is another good point. I’d try turning off Fast Startup first, and if that alone doesn’t clear the issue, try this (leaving Fast Startup off).

  • Redkey@programming.dev
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    22 hours ago

    Make sure that Windows Fast Startup is turned off. I don’t know if that’s specifically the problem here, but in my experience quite a few “everything’s fine, it should be working!” boot issues have been resolved by booting into Windows, turning off Fast Startup, and then doing a full shut down before going back to Linux, especially on laptops.

  • jlow (he / him)@discuss.tchncs.de
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    24 hours ago

    Mmmmh, that is strange, my first thought was that Windows messed with / updated the BIOS but since you checked that I’m not sure what else it could be …

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    Not impossible you just killed your drive somehow, though unlikely.

    Does the laptop have a manual boot menu you can try and select the drive to boot from?

    If it still boots off the LiveUSB, plug that in and see if you can view the filesystem of the drive having issues. Double check in a disk manager that it says it’s bootable, then reboot, go to the LiveUSB Grub menu, and see if there is an option to skip booting the LiveUSB and boot from disk. See if anything happens then. It’s only two levels of debugging, but one or the other is going to show if your drive is not cooperating.

  • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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    21 hours ago

    Are you using efi boot. You may need to remove the windows selection and point it to the Linux efi selection in the boot options.

      • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        6 hours ago

        Then the boot entry is probabl messed up. You can try switching to legacy boot, instead of EFI just to see if you have luck but sounds like you will need to have a live USB stick to boot and repair your drive