

- #LINUX MINT NOT IN WINDOWS 10 BOOT MENU INSTALL#
- #LINUX MINT NOT IN WINDOWS 10 BOOT MENU WINDOWS 8.1#
#LINUX MINT NOT IN WINDOWS 10 BOOT MENU WINDOWS 8.1#
I had this command sudo update-grub giving me following result in screen shot (which seems satisfactory :\ )Īfter choosing second option after F9 I am taken to menu where I can boot into Linux Mint as well as Windows from there (typical maroon background menu) I want this menu to appear at first whenever I start my laptop. The dual boot menu in windows 10 is graphical style but in windows 8.1 is classic, black-white line style. I tried some more commands mounting individually 'chroot' something but it was giving /cow error. (What I understood was I mounted Linux partition and installed grub over there) Then I tried live booting from pen drive and reinstalling grub from there by some commands, but it was giving me errors. GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" If it is the same case with you, go to BIOS settings.

This means that in the boot settings, there is only Windows, no Linux option. One other common issue that many people encounter is the absence of Linux grub entry from the boot options. The Windows Boot Manager appears on the GRUB's list of operative systems in the EFI drive but when selecting it I get a blue screen from Windows telling me that the boot device is not accesible. But if there is no Ubuntu/Linux option in the boot menu Method 2: Add Linux boot entry in the boot settings. After installing Linux Mint 20 I lost access to Windows. GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian` I have a Dell Inspiron 7580 laptop with Windows 10. Open it and choose Manage EFI Boot Option Select Windows Boot Manager Then disable it (There is an enable.
#LINUX MINT NOT IN WINDOWS 10 BOOT MENU INSTALL#
I have searched for my problem, but couldn't solve it.įirst I read about grub, this is my grub file I found at /etc/default/grub. Best and easiest way is to Install Hasleo EasyUEFI. There is only OS boot manager, others are external device stuffs. The boot priority is 'OS boot manager' and then USB, DISK etc. I have UEFI enabled (Legacy disabled) and Secure boot disabled.

To boot into Linux Mint I have to each time press F9 to show boot options, and choose 'Ubuntu' after which I am shown the Linux Mint boot screen option (gives me option to boot into linux-mint compatibility and stuff) – and then choose Linux Mint 17.2 to boot in it.Īfter pressing F9, I get a menu -> Then I choose second option for Mint, the first is for Windows. My problem is: Whenever I turn on the laptop, I am directly taken to Windows 10 and not given an option for Linux Mint. UNetbootin allows you to create bootable Live USB drives for Ubuntu, Fedora, and other Linux distributions without burning a CD. I have installed Linux Mint on another partition and both the operating systems work fine (I am able to use both of them). I have Windows 10 operating system on HP Pavilion laptop not very old.
