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jheis
August 18th, 2009, 09:26 PM
I did a dual boot install of 9.04 on a T43 Thinkpad with a 80 GB drive and everything seemed to go fine. XP in a 25 GB partition & Ubuntu in a 50 GB partition.

After the install I also installed some software packages with the add/remove tool. Again, everything seemed to go fine. I was then prompted to also install some updates. I installed all the updates except those relating to Evolution since I was intending to use Thunderbird instead of Evolution.

Apparently, this was a BIG mistake because now when I try to launch Ubuntu - instead of the log in screen - I get a reddish flash across the top of the screen and 4 columns of narrow alternating black & white horizontal stripes filling most of the rest of the screen. Fortunately, XP still works...

How can I recover from this? TIA.

James

jheis
August 19th, 2009, 02:36 AM
Bump. Anyone?

pizza-is-good
August 19th, 2009, 02:43 AM
Since you only used Ubuntu for a day, I just recommend that you do a clean install of Ubuntu.

My reccomendation is that you ALWASYS check ALL updates, just in case, although I doubt that it was those updates that caused your system to crash.

If you need tips on the reinstall, let me know.

presence1960
August 19th, 2009, 02:53 AM
I did a dual boot install of 9.04 on a T43 Thinkpad with a 80 GB drive and everything seemed to go fine. XP in a 25 GB partition & Ubuntu in a 50 GB partition.

After the install I also installed some software packages with the add/remove tool. Again, everything seemed to go fine. I was then prompted to also install some updates. I installed all the updates except those relating to Evolution since I was intending to use Thunderbird instead of Evolution.

Apparently, this was a BIG mistake because now when I try to launch Ubuntu - instead of the log in screen - I get a reddish flash across the top of the screen and 4 columns of narrow alternating black & white horizontal stripes filling most of the rest of the screen. Fortunately, XP still works...

How can I recover from this? TIA.



James

Boot your machine, at the GRUB menu choose recovery mode. Be patient as all the text scrolls on your screen- let it finish. Choose fix x from the menu, you may have to scroll down to see it. When that is complete choose resume normal boot and see what happens.

jheis
August 19th, 2009, 05:57 PM
Well, I tried running xfix in the recovery mode and now instead of the 4 columns of black and white stripes I'm getting the red flash at the top of the screen a couple of green & purple streaks across the middle of the screen and a corrupted bottom half of the "Windows is shutting down" screen... Seeing "Windows" gave me a bit of a start fearing that Ubuntu had trashed the XP partition as well, but XP still works.

I've also tied dpkg & fsck with no luck.

I'm ready to try a new install, but the Ubuntu installation program wants to install along side the two existing OS (XP & 9.04).

So, I need help. How do I uninstall the corrupted Ubuntu & do a fresh install.

James

raymondh
August 19th, 2009, 06:08 PM
So, I need help. How do I uninstall the corrupted Ubuntu & do a fresh install.

James

James,

2 options :

1. On partitioning stage, select manual. Highlight the appropriate partition as your ubuntu may be installed inside an EXTENDED partition, set the mountpoint root (/) and format to either ext3 or ext4. This will rewrite over the old 9.04.

2. You can boot into the liveCD and go in live session to access gparted (system > admin > partition editor. In gparted, click on swap and select swap-off. Then, use gparted to delete the old 9.04 leaving the space unallocated. Exit gparted and continue with the install ... selecting (use available free space -something to that wording).

You can also use this opportunity to create a separate /home partition for future re-installation issues.

Whatever you choose ... have your files backed-up first. Post back if you are unsure or need more assistance. Remember ... during the install, you have a chance to back-off until step 7.

If unsure, post a screenshot of gparted and we can go from there. It'll help the forum visualize the install.


Good luck.

jheis
August 20th, 2009, 12:29 AM
I followed Raymond's instructions & used gparted to try to fix the problem.

I was able to delete the botched 9.04 installation & left the 50 GB partition unallocated.

When I ran installation again, however, it expanded the XP partition & gave me tiny partitions for 9.04. I'll try to attach a screen shot of what I've got now in gparted:

What now? I don't want to screw things up worse than they are. Thanks

James

drs305
August 20th, 2009, 12:31 AM
Check out Post #11:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1244519#11

It will provide a brief explanation and then direct you to a post of how to repeat the installation, avoiding the same problem. The partitioning Step 4 has tripped up a lot of new users - hopefully it will be fixed.

raymondh
August 20th, 2009, 01:36 AM
I followed Raymond's instructions & used gparted to try to fix the problem.

I was able to delete the botched 9.04 installation & left the 50 GB partition unallocated.

When I ran installation again, however, it expanded the XP partition & gave me tiny partitions for 9.04. I'll try to attach a screen shot of what I've got now in gparted:

What now? I don't want to screw things up worse than they are. Thanks

James

Drs' has a good guide about the 2.5GB install error.

You can elect, at this point, to work and resize what you've got or, re-do.

This is a link on a similar situation (http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1241878&page=3). In this thread, the OP decided to re-do and create partitions beforehand and then use the manual install option. If you decide to follow this route/thread, note that XP's disk utility will not shrink hence requiring that you use gparted, or another utility.

Post back if you need clarifications.

Good luck.

jheis
August 20th, 2009, 03:21 AM
Thanks Raymond & Drs

I guess third time is charmed. After reading through everything, I decided to delete the tiny partitions & start over. The corrupted screen still flashes once before it goes to the login screen, but it does go the the login screen, so I guess I can live with it.

Attached is a screen shot of gparted as it is set up now. Let me know if you see any problems with it. Thanks again.

James

drs305
August 20th, 2009, 03:30 AM
jheis,

that looks good - and you have plenty of space in your ubuntu partition should you ever decide to split it up to create a few more logical partitions such as a separate home or data partition.

raymondh
August 20th, 2009, 04:00 AM
Thanks Raymond & Drs

I guess third time is charmed. After reading through everything, I decided to delete the tiny partitions & start over. The corrupted screen still flashes once before it goes to the login screen, but it does go the the login screen, so I guess I can live with it.

Attached is a screen shot of gparted as it is set up now. Let me know if you see any problems with it. Thanks again.

James

Well done James =D>

Congratulations ... enjoy your install .... happy ubuntu-ing.