Yes, I tried GRUB customizer a while ago in the hopes it would let me add in an entry for Windows. It didn't, but I used it to tidy up the GRUB menu I had then anyway, so it would only show the two options for 12.04 and 10.04, and none of the other options - which is the same as what I see now, with no other options...has use of GRUB Customizer prevented proper restoration of GRUB in this instance?
Last edited by Sunships; May 12th, 2012 at 11:49 AM.
I ran into a user a couple of days ago where this had been a problem so lets do a grub purge and reinstall in the 12.04 desktop environment, not the cd but the running OS.
Run these commands.
Then to reinstallCode:sudo apt-get purge grub-pc grub-common
You will be asked after this second command where to put grub choose sda only and use the space key to mark it then when the process is done run.Code:sudo apt-get install grub-pc grub-common
just to be safe
Code:sudo update-grub
HOORAY, it worked! On boot I now get a GRUB menu with options for 12.04, Windows and 10.04, with 12.04 as default - just what I needed!
Thanks wilee and darkod for helping out on a Saturday, no less - I am playing this song in your honour now: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koJlIGDImiU
Yeah, the grub had some strange /boot/extlinux/extlinux.conf file which might be from grub customizer or another tool you tried. I think it was not working properly because of this.
Purging everything and installing again grub2 made it work with default options.
This is why I always prefer the ubuntu cd before any other tools. It has everything you need and other tools sometimes work "in their own way".
As you probably already figured out, no, now you don't need to create that small partition. The win7 boot files were added to the partition where the OS it, nothing bad about that.
Darko.
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Ubuntu 18.04 LTS 64bit
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