Hi Thomas, So ran Ubuntu from the usb stick & typed lsblk into the terminal and got;
sda ----sda1 512M l____sda2 465.3G sbd 7.5G l__sbd1 7.5G part/cdrom So ran in the terminal sudo grub-install /dev/sda2 but the terminal said it could not be found?So shut it down & unplugged the dvd drive so only the one harddrive is working.....(you can hear it working slightly while loading the programs) Then made a new bootable usb of UbuntuStudio19.10 with Etcher this time (instead of Rufus last time)and before installing highlighted "check disk for errors" &pressed enter-which took a while but eventually it said everything is okay. So installed UbuntuStudio (erase disk completely & install UbuntuStudio option)but for the first time (after 3or 4 previous attempts over the past few days)got this pop up while the GRUB was installing ; GRUB installation failed....The 'grub-efi-amd64-signed' package failed to install into / target /. . ..Installer crashed ...we're sorry ...........file report Mind you something must be working because this message is being written to you on the same PC ? ________________________________ From: ubuntu-studio-users <ubuntu-studio-users-boun...@lists.ubuntu.com> on behalf of Thomas Pfundt <captain-...@protonmail.ch> Sent: Sunday, January 19, 2020 11:42 PM To: Ubuntu Studio Users <ubuntu-studio-users@lists.ubuntu.com> Subject: Re: [ubuntu-studio-users] Error 1965 Hi, Ubuntu installer may have selected another drive automatically by error. Which may be something developers address? I'm not even sure where the error lies exactly. I haven't ever experienced this myself, but I thought I would mention it, just in case. The Windows installer tends to order drives upon partitioning seemingly at random occasionally, it might also be a BIOS issue on some motherboards to begin with. I've read about Ubiquity (Ubuntu's installer) pre-selecting another drive than the one the system is supposed to be installed on for the bootloader, but only on manual install. Since this wasn't the case, I would assume the bootloader was installed to the correct drive. There are a ton of possibilities here, let's start with something practical: Do you have multiple drives installed (also USB)? Enter your computer's boot menu and just try booting one drive after another. Maybe the bootloader in fact was installed onto the wrong drive, remember which one booted and just set it as the boot device in your BIOS. In case no drive is able to boot, things get a bit more complicated. First check if you have AHCI or IDE-compatibility mode enabled for your drives in your BIOS. You should find it somewhere under SATA/storage options, every BIOS is different. Try selecting the other option. Also look for anything like "secure boot" or "fast boot" and disable those settings. Try to boot the drives again. If that doesn't work, reset everything to what it was. After that, boot into your Ubuntu live system again, but instead of installing, this time select "Try Ubuntu" and follow these instructions: https://askubuntu.com/a/655828 You have to identify your Ubuntu drive, since it might not be /dev/sda as in the example, enter "lsblk" beforehand and look for the drive which has a partition marked with a slash "/", that's the one that needs to be used. After that, reboot and try again. Now, if all of this doesn't work, since it's a new installation and assuming there is no unique data on your system drive yet, because you haven't used it (?), you could just re-install the system once more. The issue could also have been a broken live system or a (memory) error while installing. I'd advise you to internally unplug all drives except the one the system should be installed on and maybe make a new Ubuntu USB or DVD. Press Shift when you boot your Ubuntu live system as you see the keyboard icon. Then select "Check disk for errors" before you install to make sure the live DVD or USB is good. Just go ahead with the installation, there should be only one drive available. I don't think I can explain any of this much simpler from a distance, if you need additional help, is there anybody you can reach with a bit of Linux-knowledge or general computer experience who could assist you with this?
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