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December 07, 2009 | Paul Merak | Comments 14

How To: Restore GRUB bootloader in Ubuntu 9.10 (standard and Netbook Remix)

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If you installed  any non-Linux OS on your netbook after installing Linux, then you will have trouble getting your GRUB bootloader since the process of restoring GRUB has changed. But, don’t panic, here are the instructions to get your GRUB bootloader back.

  1. Boot from the CD/USB flash drive from which you installed Ubuntu
  2. Open terminal (It is there under Accessories)
  3. type in sudo fdisk -l
  4. then type sudo mount /dev/sdAB /mnt , where A is your drive and B is your linux partition. In my case, I typed in sudo mount /dev/sda7 /mnt
  5. install GRUB again by typing this sudo grub-install --root-directory=/mnt /dev/sdA , where A is your drive. In my case, I typed sda
  6. Now type sudo umount /mnt

This should work for Jolicloud Linux OS too, but I’m not using Jolicloud right now.

Read Jolicloud Review

Read Ubuntu 9.10 Review

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14 Responses to “How To: Restore GRUB bootloader in Ubuntu 9.10 (standard and Netbook Remix)”

  1. klyrish says:

    Thank you so much for this! I just upgraded XP Home > 7 Home Premium on my Aspire One D250 and freaked out when suddenly I was no longer able to choose whether I wanted to boot into UNR or Windows.

    All’s good now, though. :D

  2. hammerjw says:

    If you had a /boot partition, make a directory in /mount after you boot using a live cd, then mount the /boot partition of your installation there. Then use the same commands above. Thanks for the post. This helped me out of the dog house.

  3. hammerjw says:

    whoops… I meant /media instead of /mount. I have shown my age…

  4. james says:

    hi. i just followd these steps and got my GRUB loader back fine and dandy. however it doesnt pick up the windows xp i just installed that made me loose the grub in the first place….

    im a little baffled and have only been using ubuntu for a few weeks. sorry if its a foolish question.

  5. Edward says:

    Thank you so much. I don’t know why it took me SOOOO long to find this page, but I’m glad I did. SST2P. Solved my issue with no real problem. system was a little herky-jerky upon reboot after following instructions, but rebooting once more after Ubuntu 9.10 loaded initially solved the problem.

  6. clark says:

    didnt work for me exactly, after executing those commands, reboot (if windows is not booting) log in into your hard drives linux installation and type:

    sudo update-grub

    As described at:

    https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#Reinstalling%20GRUB%202

  7. uco73 says:

    Great job! Thanks a lot!!!

  8. claudio says:

    thank you so much dude , you really saved my ass! after installing opensuse 11.2 somehow the grub got deleted and I couldn’t mount neither ubuntu or opensuse anymore, now it’s all solved thanks to you:-) thank you so much!!^___^

  9. Yashik Nanan says:

    This is so fn marvellous!!! BRILLIANT!! I had just done an update on easypeasy, and it totally screwed me… no grub, no windows 7 stuff… nothing.

    Your howto totally sorted things out!

    THANK YOU SOOOOOOO MUCH!!!!!!

  10. Judy says:

    I had a successful Windows 7/Lucid Lynx dual boot, was working wonderfully – that is until I logged ina worked in Windows for while. Nw am unable to login on Lucid. Can get to login window but is asking for password etc, in spite of fact I set it to login automatically, and when I enter the password it doeesn’t work? How do I fix this?

  11. ascariz says:

    SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO SOOOOOOOOOOOOOO THANKS! i delete other partition to increase my ubuntu space, but the sda6 become sda5. i noticed that in grub.cfg. but cannot edit the file. ur method save me. realy2 thankz!

  12. Juanjuanjo says:

    Thanksssssss, the only “how to” that is good

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