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   Message 5,805 of 8,232   
   arlen holder to All   
   Re: How to reset dual boot Linux:Win GRU   
   05 Dec 18 16:21:21   
   
   XPost: alt.comp.os.windows-10   
      
   Hi Paul, Wildman, and Carlos,   
      
   (I will respond to Paul's advice separately, as this is already long.)   
      
   Thanks for your good advice:   
    GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER=true"   
   Which is what I needed and will take, as much as I understand it, as I   
   readily admit I never really understood how grub works (since it installs   
   itself in a dual-boot setup) and where you have explained to me already   
   more than I knew about my own Grub setup!   
      
   This is what Grub found this morning, booting with all 3 HDDs powered on:   
      
   o Ubuntu   
   o Advanced options for Ubuntu   
   o Memory test   
   o Windows 10 (on /dev/sda1)   
   o Windows 10 (on /dev/sda2)   
   o Windows 10 (on /dev/sda3)   
      
   I have never really understood this "sda" SCSI drive nomenclature since I   
   never use terms like "sda" except when I'm forced to, so I had assumed   
   (wrongly it turns out) that sda3 must contain the latest Windows 10, but   
   choosing sda3 failed to boot no matter what options I tried:   
       
   o Preparing Automatic Repair   
   o Diagnosing your PC   
   o Your PC did not start correctly   
      
   The same sequence happens with sda2, so sda2 and sda3 must be HDD1 and HDD2   
   (each of which has an "old" Windows 10), where HDD2 definitely also has the   
   older Ubuntu dual boot setup that I had never bothered to wipe out (but   
   where I don't know if that HDD2 is sda2 or sda3 yet since I never use sda   
   SCSI-drive nomenclature except in debugging situations).   
      
   The question is "where is grub coming from", given that HDD3 (which   
   previously had Windows 10 1803 + Ubuntu 18.04) was just "wiped out" a week   
   or so ago using a Windows 10 1809 ISO to perform a clean install on that   
   HDD3. [It seems clear that Grub must be coming from HDD2 since that's the   
   only possibility left!]   
      
   After the recent power interruption destroyed Windows 10 1803, I was able   
   to boot to Ubuntu 18.04, so it was only Windows that was affected by the   
   power outage.   
      
   Nonetheless, I wanted to start both new and clean, so I explicitly   
   disconnected HDD1 and HDD2 before I booted to a newly made Windows 10 1809   
   ISO and then I told that Windows 10 1809 boot GUI to destroy the previous   
   Ubuntu 18.04 partition along with the previous Windows partition (where the   
   plan is to install Ubuntu 18.10 as the dual boot companion to Windows 1809:   
   o    
   o    
      
   Given that, I had "thought" (and intended) that I wiped out Grub2 at the   
   same time, which I probably did ... but only on HDD3 was grub wiped out   
   (apparently).   
      
   Subsequent booting on HDD3 (with both HDD1 and HDD2 disconnected) showed no   
   hint of Grub, as HDD3 booted right to Windows (where I will add Ubuntu   
   18.10 soon).   
      
   Before I do that, I need to better figure the "boot sequence with grub"   
   out, since I had "thought" that connecting HDD3 explicitly on the   
   motherboard SATA1 port was how to tell the computer to boot to that   
   specific OS (which is the only working windows left).   
      
   But somehow, when I connect HDD2 and HDD1, the older Grub (from Ubuntu   
   17.04) is taking over, which is the sequence I need to try to understand,   
   since it's certainly an "older grub" that I don't want to be active.   
      
   I saw Carlos' suggestion of:   
     ">You can easily create your own menu and disable os-prober."   
   Where I agree that the 'wrong' grub is running, which is then finding the   
   "wrong" Windows to attempt the booting process.   
      
   And I saw Wildman's suggestion of:   
    "> Add this to /etc/default/grub"   
    " > GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER=true"   
   Where, in my plan, there should not be a grub in the first place (but   
   obviously grub exists, even as it's an "older" grub on a non-boot disk).   
      
   The interesting question is "where do I find this Grub", since, the HDD3   
   boot disk, which I specifically attached to the 1st motherboard port   
   (SATA1) doesn't have grub (as far as I know).   
      
   (Obviously, I will research more how to figure out why the 'wrong' grub is   
   taking over, and then how to stop that grub from activating itself.)   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
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