** Description changed:

  Description: An update to linux kernel on Ubuntu 17.10 that enabled the
  intel-spi-* drivers made Insyde BIOS unusable. Main issues were Settings
  being not stored, USB Boot impossible and EFI entries read-only.
  
  Fix: The issue was fixed in Kernel Version 4.13.0-21. But previous
  affected machines still suffered from a broken BIOS.
  
- Repair: Boot Linux and Install Kernel Version 4.14.9. Reboot into Linux
- and BIOS should be restored to a working state.
+ Repair: If you still can boot into Ubuntu, you can recover your BIOS
+ with the following steps:
+ 
+ 1. Boot into Ubuntu
+ 2. Download 
http://people.canonical.com/~ypwong/lp1734147/linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+20170103+1_amd64.deb
+ 3. Install the downloaded package:
+   $ sudo dpkg -i 
linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+20170103+1_amd64.deb
+ 4. Make sure the kernel is installed without any error. Once installed, 
reboot.
+ 5. At grub, choose the newly installed kernel. You can choose the "recovery" 
mode.
+ 6. Reboot and go to BIOS settings to confirm your BIOS has been recovered.
+ 7. In case your BIOS is not recovered, reboot to the new kernel, then reboot 
*once again* to the new kernel, do not enter BIOS settings before the reboot. 
After the second reboot, check BIOS.
+ 8. If your BIOS issue remains, download another kernel from 
http://people.canonical.com/~ypwong/lp1734147/linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+clear+debug_amd64.deb,
 and use dpkg to install it, then repeat steps 4 to 6.
  
  ---
  
  Test Case: Fix has been verified by our HWE team on affected hardware.
  
  Regression Potential: Minimal, it's unlikely anyone is actually doing
  anything which requires this driver.
  
  ---
  
  Affected Machines:
  
  Lenovo B40-70
  Lenovo B50-70
  Lenovo B50-80
  Lenovo Flex-3
  Lenovo Flex-10
  Lenovo G40-30
  Lenovo G50-30
  Lenovo G50-70
  Lenovo G50-80
  Lenovo S20-30
  Lenovo U31-70
  Lenovo Y50-70
  Lenovo Y70-70
  Lenovo Yoga Thinkpad (20C0)
  Lenovo Yoga 2 11" - 20332
  Lenovo Z50-70
  Lenovo Z51-70
  Lenovo ideapad 100-15IBY
  
  Acer Aspire E5-771G
  Acer Aspire ES1-111M-C1LE (not fixed by 4.14.9 and 4.14.10)
  Acer TravelMate B113
  Acer Swift SF314-52 (Fixed by 4.14.9)
  Toshiba Satellite S55T-B5233
  Toshiba Satellite L50-B-1R7
  Toshiba Satellite S50-B-13G
  Dell Inspiron 15-3531  (not fixed by 4.14.9)
  Mediacom Smartbook 14 Ultra M-SB14UC
  Acer Aspire E3-111-C0UM
  HP 14-r012la
  
  ---
  
  Original Description:
  
  Basically on Lenovo Y50-70 after installing Ubuntu 17.10, many users
  reported a corrupted BIOS.
  
  It's not possible to save new settings in BIOS anymore and after
  rebooting, the system starts with the old settings.
  
  Moreover (and most important) USB booting is not possible anymore since
  USB is not recognized. It's very serious, since our machines do not have
  a CDROM.
  
  Lenovo forums at the moment are full of topics regading this issue.
  
  Thank you!!

** Description changed:

  Description: An update to linux kernel on Ubuntu 17.10 that enabled the
  intel-spi-* drivers made Insyde BIOS unusable. Main issues were Settings
  being not stored, USB Boot impossible and EFI entries read-only.
  
  Fix: The issue was fixed in Kernel Version 4.13.0-21. But previous
  affected machines still suffered from a broken BIOS.
  
  Repair: If you still can boot into Ubuntu, you can recover your BIOS
  with the following steps:
  
  1. Boot into Ubuntu
  2. Download 
http://people.canonical.com/~ypwong/lp1734147/linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+20170103+1_amd64.deb
  3. Install the downloaded package:
-   $ sudo dpkg -i 
linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+20170103+1_amd64.deb
+   $ sudo dpkg -i 
linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+20170103+1_amd64.deb
  4. Make sure the kernel is installed without any error. Once installed, 
reboot.
  5. At grub, choose the newly installed kernel. You can choose the "recovery" 
mode.
  6. Reboot and go to BIOS settings to confirm your BIOS has been recovered.
  7. In case your BIOS is not recovered, reboot to the new kernel, then reboot 
*once again* to the new kernel, do not enter BIOS settings before the reboot. 
After the second reboot, check BIOS.
  8. If your BIOS issue remains, download another kernel from 
http://people.canonical.com/~ypwong/lp1734147/linux-image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic_4.15.0-041500rc6.201712312330+clear+debug_amd64.deb,
 and use dpkg to install it, then repeat steps 4 to 6.
+ 
+ After your BIOS is fixed, the kernel packages you just installed are no
+ longer needed, you can remove it by running 'sudo dpkg -r linux-
+ image-4.15.0-041500rc6-generic'.
  
  ---
  
  Test Case: Fix has been verified by our HWE team on affected hardware.
  
  Regression Potential: Minimal, it's unlikely anyone is actually doing
  anything which requires this driver.
  
  ---
  
  Affected Machines:
  
  Lenovo B40-70
  Lenovo B50-70
  Lenovo B50-80
  Lenovo Flex-3
  Lenovo Flex-10
  Lenovo G40-30
  Lenovo G50-30
  Lenovo G50-70
  Lenovo G50-80
  Lenovo S20-30
  Lenovo U31-70
  Lenovo Y50-70
  Lenovo Y70-70
  Lenovo Yoga Thinkpad (20C0)
  Lenovo Yoga 2 11" - 20332
  Lenovo Z50-70
  Lenovo Z51-70
  Lenovo ideapad 100-15IBY
  
  Acer Aspire E5-771G
  Acer Aspire ES1-111M-C1LE (not fixed by 4.14.9 and 4.14.10)
  Acer TravelMate B113
  Acer Swift SF314-52 (Fixed by 4.14.9)
  Toshiba Satellite S55T-B5233
  Toshiba Satellite L50-B-1R7
  Toshiba Satellite S50-B-13G
  Dell Inspiron 15-3531  (not fixed by 4.14.9)
  Mediacom Smartbook 14 Ultra M-SB14UC
  Acer Aspire E3-111-C0UM
  HP 14-r012la
  
  ---
  
  Original Description:
  
  Basically on Lenovo Y50-70 after installing Ubuntu 17.10, many users
  reported a corrupted BIOS.
  
  It's not possible to save new settings in BIOS anymore and after
  rebooting, the system starts with the old settings.
  
  Moreover (and most important) USB booting is not possible anymore since
  USB is not recognized. It's very serious, since our machines do not have
  a CDROM.
  
  Lenovo forums at the moment are full of topics regading this issue.
  
  Thank you!!

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1734147

Title:
  Ubuntu 17.10 corrupting BIOS - many LENOVO laptops models

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/linux/+bug/1734147/+subscriptions

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to