Problem booting from external SSD because Lenovo laptop not allowing dual-boot into anything other than...












0















I am trying to dual-boot Ubuntu 18.04 from an external SSD from my Lenovo Flex 5. I have already got it working on my desktop but it seems Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows, and I want to be able to work with the same OS on both devices.



So far I have backed up my EFI partition and replaced efibootbootx64.efi with grubx64.efi to override the restriction. From here I am not sure where to go because I already have Ubuntu installed on the SSD and I just want to be able to boot from it, and I have not been able to find any documentation on this.



Thank you for your help.










share|improve this question


















  • 3





    Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! What is the problem exactly? Like when you try to boot it, what happens? How did you find out "Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows"? Also please read How to Ask if you haven't already.

    – wjandrea
    Jan 11 at 19:13











  • I normally replace bootx64.efi with shimx64.efi, even though I do not have UEFI Secure boot on. But yours still should work. Some newer installs want mmx64.efi in /EFI/Boot also. That is key manager to allow driver install with secure boot on. My systems see external bootable devices as drives, not USB device. You may have settings in UEFI to allow USB boot which is separate from UEFI Secure boot on/off settings. Allowing USB boot is not considered Secure, so setting required.

    – oldfred
    Jan 12 at 17:39


















0















I am trying to dual-boot Ubuntu 18.04 from an external SSD from my Lenovo Flex 5. I have already got it working on my desktop but it seems Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows, and I want to be able to work with the same OS on both devices.



So far I have backed up my EFI partition and replaced efibootbootx64.efi with grubx64.efi to override the restriction. From here I am not sure where to go because I already have Ubuntu installed on the SSD and I just want to be able to boot from it, and I have not been able to find any documentation on this.



Thank you for your help.










share|improve this question


















  • 3





    Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! What is the problem exactly? Like when you try to boot it, what happens? How did you find out "Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows"? Also please read How to Ask if you haven't already.

    – wjandrea
    Jan 11 at 19:13











  • I normally replace bootx64.efi with shimx64.efi, even though I do not have UEFI Secure boot on. But yours still should work. Some newer installs want mmx64.efi in /EFI/Boot also. That is key manager to allow driver install with secure boot on. My systems see external bootable devices as drives, not USB device. You may have settings in UEFI to allow USB boot which is separate from UEFI Secure boot on/off settings. Allowing USB boot is not considered Secure, so setting required.

    – oldfred
    Jan 12 at 17:39
















0












0








0








I am trying to dual-boot Ubuntu 18.04 from an external SSD from my Lenovo Flex 5. I have already got it working on my desktop but it seems Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows, and I want to be able to work with the same OS on both devices.



So far I have backed up my EFI partition and replaced efibootbootx64.efi with grubx64.efi to override the restriction. From here I am not sure where to go because I already have Ubuntu installed on the SSD and I just want to be able to boot from it, and I have not been able to find any documentation on this.



Thank you for your help.










share|improve this question














I am trying to dual-boot Ubuntu 18.04 from an external SSD from my Lenovo Flex 5. I have already got it working on my desktop but it seems Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows, and I want to be able to work with the same OS on both devices.



So far I have backed up my EFI partition and replaced efibootbootx64.efi with grubx64.efi to override the restriction. From here I am not sure where to go because I already have Ubuntu installed on the SSD and I just want to be able to boot from it, and I have not been able to find any documentation on this.



Thank you for your help.







boot dual-boot grub2 uefi ssd






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share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 11 at 19:01









brunerm99brunerm99

11




11








  • 3





    Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! What is the problem exactly? Like when you try to boot it, what happens? How did you find out "Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows"? Also please read How to Ask if you haven't already.

    – wjandrea
    Jan 11 at 19:13











  • I normally replace bootx64.efi with shimx64.efi, even though I do not have UEFI Secure boot on. But yours still should work. Some newer installs want mmx64.efi in /EFI/Boot also. That is key manager to allow driver install with secure boot on. My systems see external bootable devices as drives, not USB device. You may have settings in UEFI to allow USB boot which is separate from UEFI Secure boot on/off settings. Allowing USB boot is not considered Secure, so setting required.

    – oldfred
    Jan 12 at 17:39
















  • 3





    Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! What is the problem exactly? Like when you try to boot it, what happens? How did you find out "Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows"? Also please read How to Ask if you haven't already.

    – wjandrea
    Jan 11 at 19:13











  • I normally replace bootx64.efi with shimx64.efi, even though I do not have UEFI Secure boot on. But yours still should work. Some newer installs want mmx64.efi in /EFI/Boot also. That is key manager to allow driver install with secure boot on. My systems see external bootable devices as drives, not USB device. You may have settings in UEFI to allow USB boot which is separate from UEFI Secure boot on/off settings. Allowing USB boot is not considered Secure, so setting required.

    – oldfred
    Jan 12 at 17:39










3




3





Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! What is the problem exactly? Like when you try to boot it, what happens? How did you find out "Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows"? Also please read How to Ask if you haven't already.

– wjandrea
Jan 11 at 19:13





Welcome to Ask Ubuntu! What is the problem exactly? Like when you try to boot it, what happens? How did you find out "Lenovo restricts booting into anything but Windows"? Also please read How to Ask if you haven't already.

– wjandrea
Jan 11 at 19:13













I normally replace bootx64.efi with shimx64.efi, even though I do not have UEFI Secure boot on. But yours still should work. Some newer installs want mmx64.efi in /EFI/Boot also. That is key manager to allow driver install with secure boot on. My systems see external bootable devices as drives, not USB device. You may have settings in UEFI to allow USB boot which is separate from UEFI Secure boot on/off settings. Allowing USB boot is not considered Secure, so setting required.

– oldfred
Jan 12 at 17:39







I normally replace bootx64.efi with shimx64.efi, even though I do not have UEFI Secure boot on. But yours still should work. Some newer installs want mmx64.efi in /EFI/Boot also. That is key manager to allow driver install with secure boot on. My systems see external bootable devices as drives, not USB device. You may have settings in UEFI to allow USB boot which is separate from UEFI Secure boot on/off settings. Allowing USB boot is not considered Secure, so setting required.

– oldfred
Jan 12 at 17:39












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Have you configured your BIOS settings to change the order of precedence for hard disk drives? Usually you should be able to use a function key such as F2 or F4 etc to access your BIOS menu at startup and change boot parameters



You can usually do a quick google search such as: lenovo laptop edit bios settings



Once you find the proper function key:




  • Restart your laptop


  • Hold the function key immediately at startup


  • Look for boot or hard drive options, move your HDD to the fist spot on the list


  • Save changes, restart and it should be working







share|improve this answer
























  • I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

    – brunerm99
    Jan 18 at 18:18











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Have you configured your BIOS settings to change the order of precedence for hard disk drives? Usually you should be able to use a function key such as F2 or F4 etc to access your BIOS menu at startup and change boot parameters



You can usually do a quick google search such as: lenovo laptop edit bios settings



Once you find the proper function key:




  • Restart your laptop


  • Hold the function key immediately at startup


  • Look for boot or hard drive options, move your HDD to the fist spot on the list


  • Save changes, restart and it should be working







share|improve this answer
























  • I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

    – brunerm99
    Jan 18 at 18:18
















0














Have you configured your BIOS settings to change the order of precedence for hard disk drives? Usually you should be able to use a function key such as F2 or F4 etc to access your BIOS menu at startup and change boot parameters



You can usually do a quick google search such as: lenovo laptop edit bios settings



Once you find the proper function key:




  • Restart your laptop


  • Hold the function key immediately at startup


  • Look for boot or hard drive options, move your HDD to the fist spot on the list


  • Save changes, restart and it should be working







share|improve this answer
























  • I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

    – brunerm99
    Jan 18 at 18:18














0












0








0







Have you configured your BIOS settings to change the order of precedence for hard disk drives? Usually you should be able to use a function key such as F2 or F4 etc to access your BIOS menu at startup and change boot parameters



You can usually do a quick google search such as: lenovo laptop edit bios settings



Once you find the proper function key:




  • Restart your laptop


  • Hold the function key immediately at startup


  • Look for boot or hard drive options, move your HDD to the fist spot on the list


  • Save changes, restart and it should be working







share|improve this answer













Have you configured your BIOS settings to change the order of precedence for hard disk drives? Usually you should be able to use a function key such as F2 or F4 etc to access your BIOS menu at startup and change boot parameters



You can usually do a quick google search such as: lenovo laptop edit bios settings



Once you find the proper function key:




  • Restart your laptop


  • Hold the function key immediately at startup


  • Look for boot or hard drive options, move your HDD to the fist spot on the list


  • Save changes, restart and it should be working








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 12 at 15:18









NETcrypt0rNETcrypt0r

13




13













  • I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

    – brunerm99
    Jan 18 at 18:18



















  • I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

    – brunerm99
    Jan 18 at 18:18

















I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

– brunerm99
Jan 18 at 18:18





I have changed the default boot option to my SSD, but it automatically changes and boots into Windows every time, which is why I am trying to do this.

– brunerm99
Jan 18 at 18:18


















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