[Bug 1960141] Re: Ubiquity Bug: forces Uefi options. I need MBR not GPT.
Erich Eickmeyer
1960141 at bugs.launchpad.net
Sat Feb 5 22:11:39 UTC 2022
Thank you for taking the time to report this issue and helping to make
Ubuntu better. Examining the information you have given us, this does
not appear to be a bug report so we are closing it and converting it to
a question in the support tracker. We understand the difficulties you
are facing, but it is better to raise problems you are having in the
support tracker at https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu if you are
uncertain if they are bugs. You can also find help with your problem in
the support forum of your local Ubuntu community http://loco.ubuntu.com/
or asking at https://askubuntu.com or https://ubuntuforums.org. For help
on reporting bugs, see https://help.ubuntu.com/community/ReportingBugs.
** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Invalid
** Converted to question:
https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+question/700521
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1960141
Title:
Ubiquity Bug: forces Uefi options. I need MBR not GPT.
Status in ubiquity package in Ubuntu:
Invalid
Bug description:
Unless I use F10 and Select, I get “no bootable disk” message from my BIOS. I’ve installed separate disks with other Op systems … no problems. (Ubuntu 20.04, Mint 20.1, Zorin 16, Fedora 35, etc). It seems UB install forces Uefi options. Not good. I need Bios mode or legacy mode. I have disabled Uefi in my bios.
The UB makes my disk install type GPF.
Unless I use F10 and select an option, I get a no bootable disk
message from my BIOS. If I press F10, when the screen says, "Please
select boot device", I can select the hard drive and the Ubuntu boot
screen proceeds normally.
Only 21.10, Budgie 21.10, and unsupported 22.04 show this problem.
I’ve installed separate disks with other operating systems without any
problems. Ubuntu 20.04, Mint 20.1, Zorin 16, and Fedora 35, all work
fine. I have disabled UEFI in my BIOS and I have also tried the
"Something Else" option during installation. I've followed the Ubuntu
Handbook for installation.
My hard drive has only 2 partitions: "sda1 core.img and sda2 ext4 /".
How can I boot Ubuntu without having to use F10 and select the
appropriate drive?
Using gdisk, I found that the disk was still in GPT mode in spite of my changes. I then started over and using gparted created the following MBR disk table:
Number Start (sector) End (sector) Size Code Name
1 2048 34815 16.0 MiB 0700 Microsoft basic data
2 34816 62543871 29.8 GiB 8300 Linux filesystem
3 62543872 96098303 16.0 GiB 8200 Linux swap
4 96098304 625141759 252.3 GiB 8300 Linux filesystem
I then did a fresh install of Budgie 21.10 and chose “something else”. I had to bypass 5 error messages trying to convince me that EFI was missing. (I knew that!) The install went normally and the computer boots and works perfectly. Note: there is an option in gdisk to convert GPT to MBR but I couldn’t make it work.
I also left the problem on the AskUbuntu site but have not gotten any replies.
I next tried it on Ubuntu 21.10. Works fine. This MSDOS table can be
much simpler: A 16MB boot partition and the rest an EXT4 root
partition.
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