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Thread: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2024
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    Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Hello all. As the title suggests, I've boofed something on the upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS and the machine (Dell Inspiron w/ dual windows boot option) will not boot. Now says "no bootable device found" or similar. I'm not any kind of expert, but ran the boot repair and will include the result here. No change after the repair so now I'm a little stuck. If you're able to assist .... thanks ahead. Wilson

    Code:
    boot-repair-4ppa2081                                              [20241030_1637]
    
    ============================== Boot Info Summary ===============================
    
     => No boot loader is installed in the MBR of /dev/sda.
    
    sda1: __________________________________________________________________________
    
        File system:       vfat
        Boot sector type:  FAT32
        Boot sector info:  No errors found in the Boot Parameter Block.
        Operating System:  
        Boot files:        /efi/Boot/bkpbootx64.efi /efi/Boot/bootx64.efi 
                           /efi/Boot/fbx64.efi /efi/Boot/mmx64.efi 
                           /efi/ubuntu/fwupdx64.efi /efi/ubuntu/grubx64.efi 
                           /efi/ubuntu/mmx64.efi /efi/ubuntu/shimx64.efi 
                           /efi/ubuntu/grub.cfg /efi/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgfw.efi 
                           /efi/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgr.efi
    
    sda2: __________________________________________________________________________
    
        File system:       
        Boot sector type:  -
        Boot sector info: 
    
    sda3: __________________________________________________________________________
    
        File system:       ntfs
        Boot sector type:  NTFS
        Boot sector info:  No errors found in the Boot Parameter Block.
        Operating System:  Windows 8 or 10
        Boot files:        /Windows/System32/winload.exe
    
    sda4: __________________________________________________________________________
    
        File system:       ntfs
        Boot sector type:  NTFS
        Boot sector info:  No errors found in the Boot Parameter Block.
        Operating System:  
        Boot files:        
    
    sda5: __________________________________________________________________________
    
        File system:       ext4
        Boot sector type:  -
        Boot sector info: 
        Operating System:  Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS
        Boot files:        /boot/grub/grub.cfg /etc/fstab /etc/default/grub
    
    sdb: ___________________________________________________________________________
    
        File system:       iso9660
        Boot sector type:  Unknown
        Boot sector info: 
        Mounting failed:   mount: /mnt/BootInfo/FD/sdb: /dev/sdb already mounted or mount point busy.
    
    
    ================================ 2 OS detected =================================
    
    OS#1 (linux):   Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS on sda5
    OS#2 (windows):   Windows 8 or 10 on sda3
    
    ================================ Host/Hardware =================================
    
    CPU architecture: 64-bit
    Video: UHD Graphics 620 from Intel Corporation
    Live-session OS is Ubuntu 64-bit (Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS, focal, x86_64)
    
    ===================================== UEFI =====================================
    
    BIOS/UEFI firmware: 1.14.0(1.14) from Dell Inc.
    The firmware is EFI-compatible, and is set in EFI-mode for this live-session.
    SecureBoot disabled (confirmed by mokutil).
    BootCurrent: 0002
    Timeout: 0 seconds
    BootOrder: 0001,0000,0002
    Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager    HD(1,GPT,d091f8d5-b26d-4623-87e5-6864351227bd,0x800,0xf9800)/File(\EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi)WINDOWS.........x...B.C.D.O.B.J.E.C.T.=.{.9.d.e.a.8.6.2.c.-.5.c.d.d.-.4.e.7.0.-.a.c.c.1.-.f.3.2.b.3.4.4.d.4.7.9.5.}...r................
    Boot0001* Ubuntu    PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x17,0x0)/Sata(1,32768,0)/HD(1,GPT,d091f8d5-b26d-4623-87e5-6864351227bd,0x800,0xf9800)/File(/EFI/Ubuntu)
    Boot0002* UEFI: SanDisk Cruzer 8.02, Partition 1    PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x14,0x0)/USB(2,0)/HD(1,MBR,0x2cf4ba3a,0x506fcc,0x1f40)..BO
    
    66f69798ad23240e43b7ba0044a914c4   sda1/Boot/bkpbootx64.efi
    66f69798ad23240e43b7ba0044a914c4   sda1/Boot/bootx64.efi
    2895d47544fd587b26c7e29be1295c27   sda1/Boot/fbx64.efi
    dc3c47be2f78a78e5e57d097ae6c5c84   sda1/Boot/mmx64.efi
    b79608a8b4b6d20b9434d77fe1b85b3d   sda1/ubuntu/fwupdx64.efi
    66f69798ad23240e43b7ba0044a914c4   sda1/ubuntu/grubx64.efi
    dc3c47be2f78a78e5e57d097ae6c5c84   sda1/ubuntu/mmx64.efi
    78415fb8fb9b909f8029858113f1335f   sda1/ubuntu/shimx64.efi
    ee7c82a82dd0ce765ff8f9515d0dfb55   sda1/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgfw.efi
    86c49eee6e6bf50ddfdd9c62f6ad9e84   sda1/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgr.efi
    
    ============================= Drive/Partition Info =============================
    
    Disks info: ____________________________________________________________________
    
    sda    : is-GPT,    no-BIOSboot,    has---ESP,     not-usb,    not-mmc, has-os,    has-win,    2048 sectors * 512 bytes
    
    Partitions info (1/3): _________________________________________________________
    
    sda1    : no-os,    64, nopakmgr,    no-docgrub,    nogrub,    nogrubinstall,    no-grubenv,    noupdategrub,    not-far
    sda3    : is-os,    64, nopakmgr,    no-docgrub,    nogrub,    nogrubinstall,    no-grubenv,    noupdategrub,    end-after-100GB
    sda4    : no-os,    64, nopakmgr,    no-docgrub,    nogrub,    nogrubinstall,    no-grubenv,    noupdategrub,    end-after-100GB
    sda5    : is-os,    64, apt-get,    signed grub-efi ,    grub2,    grub-install,    grubenv-ok,    update-grub,    end-after-100GB
    
    Partitions info (2/3): _________________________________________________________
    
    sda1    : is---ESP,    part-has-no-fstab,    no-nt,    no-winload,    no-recov-nor-hid,    no-bmgr,    notwinboot, vfat
    sda3    : isnotESP,    part-has-no-fstab,    no-nt,    haswinload,    no-recov-nor-hid,    no-bmgr,    notwinboot, ntfs
    sda4    : isnotESP,    part-has-no-fstab,    no-nt,    no-winload,    recovery-or-hidden,    no-bmgr,    notwinboot, ntfs
    sda5    : isnotESP,    fstab-has-goodEFI,    no-nt,    no-winload,    no-recov-nor-hid,    no-bmgr,    notwinboot, ext4
    
    Partitions info (3/3): _________________________________________________________
    
    sda1    : not--sepboot,    no---boot,    part-has-no-fstab,    not-sep-usr,    no---usr,    part-has-no-fstab,    no--grub.d,    sda
    sda3    : not--sepboot,    no---boot,    part-has-no-fstab,    not-sep-usr,    no---usr,    part-has-no-fstab,    no--grub.d,    sda
    sda4    : not--sepboot,    no---boot,    part-has-no-fstab,    not-sep-usr,    no---usr,    part-has-no-fstab,    no--grub.d,    sda
    sda5    : not--sepboot,    with-boot,    fstab-without-boot,    not-sep-usr,    with--usr,    fstab-without-usr,    std-grub.d,    sda
    
    fdisk -l (filtered): ___________________________________________________________
    
    Disk sda: 931.53 GiB, 1000204886016 bytes, 1953525168 sectors
    Disk identifier: E6263EE3-847B-4E08-9B2D-93BF846CD904
              Start        End   Sectors   Size Type
    sda1        2048    1023999   1021952   499M EFI System
    sda2     1024000    1286143    262144   128M Microsoft reserved
    sda3     1286144  929718271 928432128 442.7G Microsoft basic data
    sda4  1952600064 1953521663    921600   450M Windows recovery environment
    sda5  1541400576 1952600063 411199488 196.1G Linux filesystem
    Partition table entries are not in disk order.
    Disk sdb: 3.76 GiB, 4022337024 bytes, 7856127 sectors
    Disk identifier: 0x2cf4ba3a
         Boot   Start     End Sectors  Size Id Type
    sdb1  *          0 5999871 5999872  2.9G  0 Empty
    sdb2       5271500 5279499    8000  3.9M ef EFI (FAT-12/16/32)
    sdb3       6000640 7856126 1855487  906M 83 Linux
    
    parted -lm (filtered): _________________________________________________________
    
    sda:1000GB:scsi:512:4096:gpt:ATA ST1000LM035-1RK1:;
    1:1049kB:524MB:523MB:fat32:EFI system partition:boot, esp;
    2:524MB:659MB:134MB::Microsoft reserved partition:msftres;
    3:659MB:476GB:475GB:ntfs:Basic data partition:msftdata;
    5:789GB:1000GB:211GB:ext4::;
    4:1000GB:1000GB:472MB:ntfs::hidden, diag;
    sdb:4022MB:scsi:512:512:unknown:SanDisk Cruzer:;
    
    Free space >10MiB: ______________________________________________________________
    
    sda: 453964MiB:752637MiB:298673MiB
    
    blkid (filtered): ______________________________________________________________
    
    NAME   FSTYPE   UUID                                 PARTUUID                             LABEL                    PARTLABEL
    sda                                                                                                                
    ├─sda1 vfat     EEDC-1691                            d091f8d5-b26d-4623-87e5-6864351227bd ESP                      EFI system partition
    ├─sda2                                               c3f72f69-12fb-4823-998c-849c888d7b69                          Microsoft reserved partition
    ├─sda3 ntfs     2E38DFD638DF9B63                     d9a742a6-ede8-4cce-878f-d55fe158adcc OS                       Basic data partition
    ├─sda4 ntfs     5C1219C81219A852                     f7cd1e6f-7072-427d-b3f7-d197956be9e5 WINRETOOLS               
    └─sda5 ext4     2e8a4205-058b-44bc-810a-910260e478f3 e3141ef3-8bb9-4441-828a-3a5b6546202f                          
    sdb    iso9660  2021-08-19-11-03-38-00                                                    Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS amd64 
    ├─sdb1 iso9660  2021-08-19-11-03-38-00               2cf4ba3a-01                          Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS amd64 
    ├─sdb2 vfat     54C5-9C6C                            2cf4ba3a-02                                                   
    └─sdb3 ext4     e8fbacfc-6eee-46bc-a286-eb39f31c3d19 2cf4ba3a-03                          writable                 
    
    Mount points (filtered): _______________________________________________________
    
                                                                   Avail Use% Mounted on
    /dev/sda1                                                     436.5M  12% /mnt/boot-sav/sda1
    /dev/sda3                                                     406.1G   8% /mnt/boot-sav/sda3
    /dev/sda4                                                       103M  77% /mnt/boot-sav/sda4
    /dev/sda5                                                     139.5G  23% /mnt/boot-sav/sda5
    /dev/sdb1                                                          0 100% /cdrom
    
    Mount options (filtered): ______________________________________________________
    
    /dev/sda1                                                     vfat            rw,relatime,fmask=0022,dmask=0022,codepage=437,iocharset=iso8859-1,shortname=mixed,errors=remount-ro
    /dev/sda3                                                     fuseblk         rw,relatime,user_id=0,group_id=0,allow_other,blksize=4096
    /dev/sda4                                                     fuseblk         rw,relatime,user_id=0,group_id=0,allow_other,blksize=4096
    /dev/sda5                                                     ext4            rw,relatime
    /dev/sdb1                                                     iso9660         ro,noatime,nojoliet,check=s,map=n,blocksize=2048
    
    ===================== sda1/efi/ubuntu/grub.cfg (filtered) ======================
    
    search.fs_uuid 2e8a4205-058b-44bc-810a-910260e478f3 root hd0,gpt5 
    set prefix=($root)'/boot/grub'
    configfile $prefix/grub.cfg
    
    ====================== sda5/boot/grub/grub.cfg (filtered) ======================
    
    Ubuntu   2e8a4205-058b-44bc-810a-910260e478f3
    Windows Boot Manager (on sda1)   osprober-efi-EEDC-1691
    ### END /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober ###
    UEFI Firmware Settings   uefi-firmware
    ### END /etc/grub.d/30_uefi-firmware ###
    
    ========================== sda5/etc/fstab (filtered) ===========================
    
    # <file system> <mount point>   <type>  <options>       <dump>  <pass>
    # / was on /dev/sda5 during installation
    UUID=2e8a4205-058b-44bc-810a-910260e478f3 /               ext4    errors=remount-ro 0       1
    # /boot/efi was on /dev/sda1 during installation
    UUID=EEDC-1691  /boot/efi       vfat    umask=0077      0       1
    /swapfile                                 none            swap    sw              0       0
    
    ======================= sda5/etc/default/grub (filtered) =======================
    
    GRUB_DEFAULT=0
    GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=menu
    GRUB_TIMEOUT=10
    GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`( . /etc/os-release; echo ${NAME:-Ubuntu} ) 2>/dev/null || echo Ubuntu`
    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"
    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX=""
    GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER=false
    
    ==================== sda5: Location of files loaded by Grub ====================
    
               GiB - GB             File                                 Fragment(s)
     765.030693054 = 821.445451776  boot/grub/grub.cfg                             1
     854.425060272 = 917.431922688  boot/vmlinuz                                   2
     766.437652588 = 822.956163072  boot/vmlinuz-5.15.0-124-generic                2
     854.425060272 = 917.431922688  boot/vmlinuz-6.8.0-47-generic                  2
     766.437652588 = 822.956163072  boot/vmlinuz.old                               2
     859.747066498 = 923.146383360  boot/initrd.img                                6
     799.864253998 = 858.847703040  boot/initrd.img-5.15.0-124-generic             7
     859.747066498 = 923.146383360  boot/initrd.img-6.8.0-47-generic               6
     799.864253998 = 858.847703040  boot/initrd.img.old                            7
    
    ===================== sda5: ls -l /etc/grub.d/ (filtered) ======================
    
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 18133 Apr  4  2024 10_linux
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 43202 Apr  4  2024 10_linux_zfs
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 14513 Apr  4  2024 20_linux_xen
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root   786 Apr  4  2024 25_bli
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 13120 Apr  4  2024 30_os-prober
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root  1174 Apr  4  2024 30_uefi-firmware
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root   214 Apr  4  2024 40_custom
    -rwxr-xr-x 1 root root   215 Apr  4  2024 41_custom
    
    
    
    Suggested repair: ______________________________________________________________
    
    The default repair of the Boot-Repair utility would reinstall the grub-efi of
    sda5,
    using the following options:  sda1/boot/efi
    Additional repair would be performed: unhide-bootmenu-10s use-standard-efi-file restore-efi-backups
    
    Final advice in case of suggested repair: ______________________________________
    
    Please do not forget to make your UEFI firmware boot on the Ubuntu 24.04.1 LTS entry (sda1/efi/****/grub****.efi (**** will be updated in the final message) file) !
    If your computer reboots directly into Windows, try to change the boot order in your UEFI firmware.
    If your UEFI firmware does not allow to change the boot order, change the default boot entry of the Windows bootloader.
    For example you can boot into Windows, then type the following command in an admin command prompt:
    bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path \EFI\****\grub****.efi (**** will be updated in the final message)
    Last edited by deadflowr; 1 Week Ago at 07:18 PM. Reason: code tags

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
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    7,797

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Does that mean you can not boot either Ubuntu or windows? There's nothing in boot repair that would indicate a problem. When you say you upgraded, what did you upgrade FROM and HOW did you upgrade? Did you use terminal commands, use the software updater, reinstall over the old system using the same drive/partition? When you access your BIOS, are you able to boot either windows or ubuntu from the UEFI menu boot options?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2024
    Beans
    34

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Yanek, thanks for the questions. Agree that the boot repair shows nothing wrong, but the machine will still not boot.

    I did the upgrade from 22 to 24 using the software updater. There are questions along the way for how to do the install, and I'm thinking I took the wrong path. My intent was to install the new version without disturbing the existing files, not a clean wipe.

    I can choose to boot to ubuntu or windows when accessing the one time boot menu. Ubuntu won't continue past the error of "no bootable device.." and windows goes to a page that says that "there is a problem .." and attempts to do a repair but fails. In order for me to be more specific I'll need to exit this session (Live) and take some notes.

    So now I'm looking for more specific questions or direction.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Beans
    7,797

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    My intent was to install the new version without disturbing the existing files, not a clean wipe
    I saw a recent post that indicated that option was available in the 24.04 installer, not sure about the software update/upgrade That has always been possible using a manual installation. One would simply select to NOT format the / filesystem and/or data partitions during an install. Just did that successfully last week with Slackware.

    When you boot and access the BIOS (not the one time boot options), do you have an option to Boot from EFI file? If so, do that and look for the ubuntu directory option and check to see what files are available to boot and try them if they are there to see if you get the same result. Do the same with windows.

    Did you keep notes during this upgrade? Do you remember what option you chose for the upgrade? Did you get any warning or error message during the upgrade that you recall? Since you are able to boot the USB with Ubuntu 20.04 on it, you are changing the default boot device in the BIOS before booting from the internal?? I don't know that it would help but, when you are doing repairs like this it is best to have the same version as the installed version, in this case 24.04. Don't really have any other suggestions.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Beans
    4,453
    Distro
    Ubuntu 24.04 Noble Numbat

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Quote Originally Posted by wcalvert View Post
    So now I'm looking for more specific questions or direction.
    rEFInd may help.
    You do not have to install it to your internal disk, simply make a bootable USB
    https://www.rodsbooks.com/refind/
    https://www.rodsbooks.com/refind/getting.html > A USB Flash Drive Image File
    Options include:-
    Start an EFI shell (where you can find both Windows and Ubuntu boot files)
    Boot the kernel directly
    Find and boot the grub efi file

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2024
    Beans
    34

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Your comments are most appreciated... and I'll say that most of the language is over my head! I don't know how to do any of the following:

    Start an EFI shell (where you can find both Windows and Ubuntu boot files)
    Boot the kernel directly
    Find and boot the grub efi file

    I do not find a boot option for my hd, so I added one that references the grub efi file (I think). That will boot and goes to a login, where I am able to log in and use a terminal type entry format. But no GUI access.

    I'll take a look at your suggestions and see what else might work.

    And for now, the install does not give me the option to install without erasing everything, with big warnings! Will more into that as well.

    Thanks

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2024
    Beans
    34

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Your comments are most appreciated... and I'll say that most of the language is over my head! I don't know how to do any of the following:

    Start an EFI shell (where you can find both Windows and Ubuntu boot files)
    Boot the kernel directly
    Find and boot the grub efi file

    I do not find a boot option for my hd, so I added one that references the grub efi file (I think). That will boot and goes to a login, where I am able to log in and use a terminal type entry format. But no GUI access.

    I'll take a look at your suggestions and see what else might work.

    And for now, the install does not give me the option to install without erasing everything, with big warnings! Will more into that as well.

    Thanks

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2024
    Beans
    34

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    So I reinstalled 24.04.1 successfully without (I think) wiping any data. Now it still will boot to the login screen but no access to the GUI. I'm convinced it's only a boot path/options type issue.

    One thought I had was whether the dual boot is causing issues.

    It is booting to UEFI vs Legacy, AHCI vs RAID, Secure Boot disabled. What else?

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Beans
    4,453
    Distro
    Ubuntu 24.04 Noble Numbat

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    Quote Originally Posted by wcalvert View Post
    Your comments are most appreciated... and I'll say that most of the language is over my head! I don't know how to do any of the following:
    Start an EFI shell (where you can find both Windows and Ubuntu boot files)
    Boot the kernel directly
    Find and boot the grub efi file
    The rEFInd USB will take care of booting the kernel or booting the grub.efi file - it's point and click.
    Using the EFI shell is a bit more complicated.
    Did you make the USB successfully?

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Oct 2024
    Beans
    34

    Re: Failed boot after upgrade to 24.04.1 LTS

    I looked at rEFind by installing it during a Live session but it didn't help any of the issues. Although it did boot to the rEFind the next boot attempt. Does it need to be on a thumb drive for it to do it's thing? I'll give that a try for now. Thanks

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