I think Windows intentionally breaks GRUB dual boot, if you see your computer saying “repairing Windows” it’s a good chance that it’s breaking your dual boot setup
They definitely succeed because it made me stop using Linux for a long time, I didn’t have time to fix it and didn’t know how. It happened multiple times.
I don’t think it does that if you have Linux on a completely separate drive instead of just a separate partition, but I’m not sure. In any case the solution is just to reinstall grub. Grab a live usb of some linux distro, chroot into your linux install, then grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/path/to/efi/dir --bootloader-id=GRUB (on uefi, if on bios do whatever the command is for bios, and replace the target architecture with whatever your architecture is, etc)
💯 Fuck it, I’m buying my new SSD today to dual boot.
I think Windows intentionally breaks GRUB dual boot, if you see your computer saying “repairing Windows” it’s a good chance that it’s breaking your dual boot setup
They definitely succeed because it made me stop using Linux for a long time, I didn’t have time to fix it and didn’t know how. It happened multiple times.
Now I exclusively use Linux out of spite
I don’t think it does that if you have Linux on a completely separate drive instead of just a separate partition, but I’m not sure. In any case the solution is just to reinstall grub. Grab a live usb of some linux distro, chroot into your linux install, then
grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/path/to/efi/dir --bootloader-id=GRUB
(on uefi, if on bios do whatever the command is for bios, and replace the target architecture with whatever your architecture is, etc)I’ve had it nuke GRUB on a seperate dualboot nvme, that was the catalyst for becoming fulltime linux for me.
I only partially understand what all this means… Guess I gotta learn today!