Unable to get to GRUB at boot and cannot boot with the default kernel












2















My Optiplex 990 with ubuntu server 16.04.3 won't boot. I'm left with a flashing cursor in the top left. I have run into the spectre kernel issue with Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic



I have tried following How to get to the GRUB menu at boot-time? to get into grub, but no amount of tapping / holding shift (or escape as listed elsewhere) has got me into grub.



I tried a live cd and ran boot-repair (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair) and that succeeded in running but fixed nothing.



Any other ideas?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Take a look at this: askubuntu.com/questions/994067/…

    – fregger
    Jan 11 '18 at 19:58






  • 1





    Possible duplicate of Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic

    – N0rbert
    Jan 12 '18 at 18:39






  • 1





    To close voters: OP is obviously aware of askubuntu.com/questions/994067/… and the answers to that question require the use of the Grub boot menu which OP can't reach. Sending them back to that question achieves nothing.

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:39











  • Possible duplicate of How can I repair grub? (How to get Ubuntu back after installing Windows?)

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:40











  • My mistake. I should add that I specifically mean this answer about Boot-Repair which allows changes to the Grub menu display setting. On top of that Boot-Repairs default action unhides the Grub menu. @Zanna

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 18:15


















2















My Optiplex 990 with ubuntu server 16.04.3 won't boot. I'm left with a flashing cursor in the top left. I have run into the spectre kernel issue with Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic



I have tried following How to get to the GRUB menu at boot-time? to get into grub, but no amount of tapping / holding shift (or escape as listed elsewhere) has got me into grub.



I tried a live cd and ran boot-repair (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair) and that succeeded in running but fixed nothing.



Any other ideas?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Take a look at this: askubuntu.com/questions/994067/…

    – fregger
    Jan 11 '18 at 19:58






  • 1





    Possible duplicate of Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic

    – N0rbert
    Jan 12 '18 at 18:39






  • 1





    To close voters: OP is obviously aware of askubuntu.com/questions/994067/… and the answers to that question require the use of the Grub boot menu which OP can't reach. Sending them back to that question achieves nothing.

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:39











  • Possible duplicate of How can I repair grub? (How to get Ubuntu back after installing Windows?)

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:40











  • My mistake. I should add that I specifically mean this answer about Boot-Repair which allows changes to the Grub menu display setting. On top of that Boot-Repairs default action unhides the Grub menu. @Zanna

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 18:15
















2












2








2








My Optiplex 990 with ubuntu server 16.04.3 won't boot. I'm left with a flashing cursor in the top left. I have run into the spectre kernel issue with Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic



I have tried following How to get to the GRUB menu at boot-time? to get into grub, but no amount of tapping / holding shift (or escape as listed elsewhere) has got me into grub.



I tried a live cd and ran boot-repair (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair) and that succeeded in running but fixed nothing.



Any other ideas?










share|improve this question
















My Optiplex 990 with ubuntu server 16.04.3 won't boot. I'm left with a flashing cursor in the top left. I have run into the spectre kernel issue with Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic



I have tried following How to get to the GRUB menu at boot-time? to get into grub, but no amount of tapping / holding shift (or escape as listed elsewhere) has got me into grub.



I tried a live cd and ran boot-repair (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Boot-Repair) and that succeeded in running but fixed nothing.



Any other ideas?







16.04 boot server grub2 kernel






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 11 '18 at 19:37









Zanna

50.9k13137241




50.9k13137241










asked Jan 11 '18 at 19:12









edwardmlyteedwardmlyte

1384




1384








  • 1





    Take a look at this: askubuntu.com/questions/994067/…

    – fregger
    Jan 11 '18 at 19:58






  • 1





    Possible duplicate of Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic

    – N0rbert
    Jan 12 '18 at 18:39






  • 1





    To close voters: OP is obviously aware of askubuntu.com/questions/994067/… and the answers to that question require the use of the Grub boot menu which OP can't reach. Sending them back to that question achieves nothing.

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:39











  • Possible duplicate of How can I repair grub? (How to get Ubuntu back after installing Windows?)

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:40











  • My mistake. I should add that I specifically mean this answer about Boot-Repair which allows changes to the Grub menu display setting. On top of that Boot-Repairs default action unhides the Grub menu. @Zanna

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 18:15
















  • 1





    Take a look at this: askubuntu.com/questions/994067/…

    – fregger
    Jan 11 '18 at 19:58






  • 1





    Possible duplicate of Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic

    – N0rbert
    Jan 12 '18 at 18:39






  • 1





    To close voters: OP is obviously aware of askubuntu.com/questions/994067/… and the answers to that question require the use of the Grub boot menu which OP can't reach. Sending them back to that question achieves nothing.

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:39











  • Possible duplicate of How can I repair grub? (How to get Ubuntu back after installing Windows?)

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 12:40











  • My mistake. I should add that I specifically mean this answer about Boot-Repair which allows changes to the Grub menu display setting. On top of that Boot-Repairs default action unhides the Grub menu. @Zanna

    – David Foerster
    Jan 13 '18 at 18:15










1




1





Take a look at this: askubuntu.com/questions/994067/…

– fregger
Jan 11 '18 at 19:58





Take a look at this: askubuntu.com/questions/994067/…

– fregger
Jan 11 '18 at 19:58




1




1





Possible duplicate of Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic

– N0rbert
Jan 12 '18 at 18:39





Possible duplicate of Kernel panic after update to 4.4.0-108-generic

– N0rbert
Jan 12 '18 at 18:39




1




1





To close voters: OP is obviously aware of askubuntu.com/questions/994067/… and the answers to that question require the use of the Grub boot menu which OP can't reach. Sending them back to that question achieves nothing.

– David Foerster
Jan 13 '18 at 12:39





To close voters: OP is obviously aware of askubuntu.com/questions/994067/… and the answers to that question require the use of the Grub boot menu which OP can't reach. Sending them back to that question achieves nothing.

– David Foerster
Jan 13 '18 at 12:39













Possible duplicate of How can I repair grub? (How to get Ubuntu back after installing Windows?)

– David Foerster
Jan 13 '18 at 12:40





Possible duplicate of How can I repair grub? (How to get Ubuntu back after installing Windows?)

– David Foerster
Jan 13 '18 at 12:40













My mistake. I should add that I specifically mean this answer about Boot-Repair which allows changes to the Grub menu display setting. On top of that Boot-Repairs default action unhides the Grub menu. @Zanna

– David Foerster
Jan 13 '18 at 18:15







My mistake. I should add that I specifically mean this answer about Boot-Repair which allows changes to the Grub menu display setting. On top of that Boot-Repairs default action unhides the Grub menu. @Zanna

– David Foerster
Jan 13 '18 at 18:15












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














The top answer to the question you linked to explains how to get into the GRUB menu if pressing shift does not work. You just edit the file /etc/default/grub and comment out GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=[some number]. Then you run sudo update-grub.



Since you can't boot at all, you can't do that so easily.



However, you can do it from a live system, so go ahead and boot from a live system as you did before.



Now you can set up a chroot. If you're not sure of the device label of your installation's root partition, try running sudo fdisk -l to identify it. You should see something in the output like



/dev/sda2 <numbers indicating size> Linux filesystem


Try mounting that partition:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt


where sdXY is the correct label. Then have a look to see if the mounted partition has the directories you expect to see in your root partition:



ls /mnt


If you see things like this (not necessarily exactly like this, but at least most of them)



bin    dev   mnt         root        sys   var
boot etc lost+found opt run srv tmp
home lib media proc sbin usr


then you got the right partition.



If you have a separate boot partition, you will need to mount it. If you are not sure, check the file /mnt/etc/fstab to see if it has a partition mounted on /boot. Ignore any mention of a partition mounted on /boot/efi.



If you have a separate boot partition, mount it:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/boot


where sdXY is the correct label of the boot partition.



We might need to bind some additional resources (I am not sure this is necessary in this case):



for d in dev sys run proc; do sudo mount --bind /$d /mnt/$d; done


OK, now enter the chroot



sudo chroot /mnt


Now we can act as if we are in our installed system. First let's edit the configuration file:



sudoedit /etc/default/grub


(or call your favourite text editor). Find the line



GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


(it may have a different number, but that is not important). Comment out the line by placing # at the start of it, so it says



#GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


If you do not have the above line, look for



GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


and comment that out instead to



#GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


check that the line



GRUB_TIMEOUT=[some number]


ends in a number greater than 0 (the default may be 10). Save the file and exit.



Run this command to write the configuration to /boot/grub/grub.cfg



sudo update-grub


Now you can reboot into your installation, and the GRUB menu will be forced to come up every time.






share|improve this answer


























  • Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:27






  • 1





    @edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:49











  • Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:41











  • Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:43











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1 Answer
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active

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1 Answer
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active

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









1














The top answer to the question you linked to explains how to get into the GRUB menu if pressing shift does not work. You just edit the file /etc/default/grub and comment out GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=[some number]. Then you run sudo update-grub.



Since you can't boot at all, you can't do that so easily.



However, you can do it from a live system, so go ahead and boot from a live system as you did before.



Now you can set up a chroot. If you're not sure of the device label of your installation's root partition, try running sudo fdisk -l to identify it. You should see something in the output like



/dev/sda2 <numbers indicating size> Linux filesystem


Try mounting that partition:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt


where sdXY is the correct label. Then have a look to see if the mounted partition has the directories you expect to see in your root partition:



ls /mnt


If you see things like this (not necessarily exactly like this, but at least most of them)



bin    dev   mnt         root        sys   var
boot etc lost+found opt run srv tmp
home lib media proc sbin usr


then you got the right partition.



If you have a separate boot partition, you will need to mount it. If you are not sure, check the file /mnt/etc/fstab to see if it has a partition mounted on /boot. Ignore any mention of a partition mounted on /boot/efi.



If you have a separate boot partition, mount it:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/boot


where sdXY is the correct label of the boot partition.



We might need to bind some additional resources (I am not sure this is necessary in this case):



for d in dev sys run proc; do sudo mount --bind /$d /mnt/$d; done


OK, now enter the chroot



sudo chroot /mnt


Now we can act as if we are in our installed system. First let's edit the configuration file:



sudoedit /etc/default/grub


(or call your favourite text editor). Find the line



GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


(it may have a different number, but that is not important). Comment out the line by placing # at the start of it, so it says



#GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


If you do not have the above line, look for



GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


and comment that out instead to



#GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


check that the line



GRUB_TIMEOUT=[some number]


ends in a number greater than 0 (the default may be 10). Save the file and exit.



Run this command to write the configuration to /boot/grub/grub.cfg



sudo update-grub


Now you can reboot into your installation, and the GRUB menu will be forced to come up every time.






share|improve this answer


























  • Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:27






  • 1





    @edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:49











  • Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:41











  • Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:43
















1














The top answer to the question you linked to explains how to get into the GRUB menu if pressing shift does not work. You just edit the file /etc/default/grub and comment out GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=[some number]. Then you run sudo update-grub.



Since you can't boot at all, you can't do that so easily.



However, you can do it from a live system, so go ahead and boot from a live system as you did before.



Now you can set up a chroot. If you're not sure of the device label of your installation's root partition, try running sudo fdisk -l to identify it. You should see something in the output like



/dev/sda2 <numbers indicating size> Linux filesystem


Try mounting that partition:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt


where sdXY is the correct label. Then have a look to see if the mounted partition has the directories you expect to see in your root partition:



ls /mnt


If you see things like this (not necessarily exactly like this, but at least most of them)



bin    dev   mnt         root        sys   var
boot etc lost+found opt run srv tmp
home lib media proc sbin usr


then you got the right partition.



If you have a separate boot partition, you will need to mount it. If you are not sure, check the file /mnt/etc/fstab to see if it has a partition mounted on /boot. Ignore any mention of a partition mounted on /boot/efi.



If you have a separate boot partition, mount it:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/boot


where sdXY is the correct label of the boot partition.



We might need to bind some additional resources (I am not sure this is necessary in this case):



for d in dev sys run proc; do sudo mount --bind /$d /mnt/$d; done


OK, now enter the chroot



sudo chroot /mnt


Now we can act as if we are in our installed system. First let's edit the configuration file:



sudoedit /etc/default/grub


(or call your favourite text editor). Find the line



GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


(it may have a different number, but that is not important). Comment out the line by placing # at the start of it, so it says



#GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


If you do not have the above line, look for



GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


and comment that out instead to



#GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


check that the line



GRUB_TIMEOUT=[some number]


ends in a number greater than 0 (the default may be 10). Save the file and exit.



Run this command to write the configuration to /boot/grub/grub.cfg



sudo update-grub


Now you can reboot into your installation, and the GRUB menu will be forced to come up every time.






share|improve this answer


























  • Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:27






  • 1





    @edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:49











  • Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:41











  • Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:43














1












1








1







The top answer to the question you linked to explains how to get into the GRUB menu if pressing shift does not work. You just edit the file /etc/default/grub and comment out GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=[some number]. Then you run sudo update-grub.



Since you can't boot at all, you can't do that so easily.



However, you can do it from a live system, so go ahead and boot from a live system as you did before.



Now you can set up a chroot. If you're not sure of the device label of your installation's root partition, try running sudo fdisk -l to identify it. You should see something in the output like



/dev/sda2 <numbers indicating size> Linux filesystem


Try mounting that partition:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt


where sdXY is the correct label. Then have a look to see if the mounted partition has the directories you expect to see in your root partition:



ls /mnt


If you see things like this (not necessarily exactly like this, but at least most of them)



bin    dev   mnt         root        sys   var
boot etc lost+found opt run srv tmp
home lib media proc sbin usr


then you got the right partition.



If you have a separate boot partition, you will need to mount it. If you are not sure, check the file /mnt/etc/fstab to see if it has a partition mounted on /boot. Ignore any mention of a partition mounted on /boot/efi.



If you have a separate boot partition, mount it:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/boot


where sdXY is the correct label of the boot partition.



We might need to bind some additional resources (I am not sure this is necessary in this case):



for d in dev sys run proc; do sudo mount --bind /$d /mnt/$d; done


OK, now enter the chroot



sudo chroot /mnt


Now we can act as if we are in our installed system. First let's edit the configuration file:



sudoedit /etc/default/grub


(or call your favourite text editor). Find the line



GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


(it may have a different number, but that is not important). Comment out the line by placing # at the start of it, so it says



#GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


If you do not have the above line, look for



GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


and comment that out instead to



#GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


check that the line



GRUB_TIMEOUT=[some number]


ends in a number greater than 0 (the default may be 10). Save the file and exit.



Run this command to write the configuration to /boot/grub/grub.cfg



sudo update-grub


Now you can reboot into your installation, and the GRUB menu will be forced to come up every time.






share|improve this answer















The top answer to the question you linked to explains how to get into the GRUB menu if pressing shift does not work. You just edit the file /etc/default/grub and comment out GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=[some number]. Then you run sudo update-grub.



Since you can't boot at all, you can't do that so easily.



However, you can do it from a live system, so go ahead and boot from a live system as you did before.



Now you can set up a chroot. If you're not sure of the device label of your installation's root partition, try running sudo fdisk -l to identify it. You should see something in the output like



/dev/sda2 <numbers indicating size> Linux filesystem


Try mounting that partition:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt


where sdXY is the correct label. Then have a look to see if the mounted partition has the directories you expect to see in your root partition:



ls /mnt


If you see things like this (not necessarily exactly like this, but at least most of them)



bin    dev   mnt         root        sys   var
boot etc lost+found opt run srv tmp
home lib media proc sbin usr


then you got the right partition.



If you have a separate boot partition, you will need to mount it. If you are not sure, check the file /mnt/etc/fstab to see if it has a partition mounted on /boot. Ignore any mention of a partition mounted on /boot/efi.



If you have a separate boot partition, mount it:



sudo mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/boot


where sdXY is the correct label of the boot partition.



We might need to bind some additional resources (I am not sure this is necessary in this case):



for d in dev sys run proc; do sudo mount --bind /$d /mnt/$d; done


OK, now enter the chroot



sudo chroot /mnt


Now we can act as if we are in our installed system. First let's edit the configuration file:



sudoedit /etc/default/grub


(or call your favourite text editor). Find the line



GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


(it may have a different number, but that is not important). Comment out the line by placing # at the start of it, so it says



#GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0


If you do not have the above line, look for



GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


and comment that out instead to



#GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden


check that the line



GRUB_TIMEOUT=[some number]


ends in a number greater than 0 (the default may be 10). Save the file and exit.



Run this command to write the configuration to /boot/grub/grub.cfg



sudo update-grub


Now you can reboot into your installation, and the GRUB menu will be forced to come up every time.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 20 at 20:19

























answered Jan 11 '18 at 20:00









ZannaZanna

50.9k13137241




50.9k13137241













  • Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:27






  • 1





    @edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:49











  • Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:41











  • Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:43



















  • Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:27






  • 1





    @edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 17:49











  • Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

    – edwardmlyte
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:41











  • Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

    – Zanna
    Jan 12 '18 at 21:43

















Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

– edwardmlyte
Jan 12 '18 at 17:27





Fantastically thorough. Though I think my system's a lost cause. The first step, finding the Linux partition. When I mount it I don't get any of the directories. I only get a list like abi-4.4.0-104-generic, abi-4.4.0-108-generic, boot-sav etc. Shown in imgur.com/a/yLj9O. No other partition can mount as mnt, so it's definitely the right one. I think it's going to have to be reinstalled

– edwardmlyte
Jan 12 '18 at 17:27




1




1





@edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

– Zanna
Jan 12 '18 at 17:49





@edwardmlyte that's the boot partition. You may be able to edit the file there grub/grub.cfg directly to force grub to appear. Change the line set timeout_style=hidden to set timeout_style=menu and set timeout=0 to set timeout=10 (about 80-90 lines down I guess?) Then just reboot, no need to chroot. I didn't recommend that before as it's risky to edit the file directly (it will be somewhat unique to your system) but try it before reinstallation!

– Zanna
Jan 12 '18 at 17:49













Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

– edwardmlyte
Jan 12 '18 at 21:41





Perfect. Once grub loaded I could update the kernel. Thanks

– edwardmlyte
Jan 12 '18 at 21:41













Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

– Zanna
Jan 12 '18 at 21:43





Awesome! Great to hear you solved it @edwardmlyte

– Zanna
Jan 12 '18 at 21:43


















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