My Dual Booting, Grub and Live Linux CD can;t find my SSD

Lulztigre
Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

Tinkerer


As shown in the illustration. To fix my grub, I went into the bios and overwrote the previous parrot EFI file and placed it above windows boot. Now I have a grub menu. When I select Parrot, though, it takes me to busybox; I've tried a variety of things and methods, but nothing seems to work...when I try to make a fresh install, Linux only sees the HDD. not the solid-state drive When I boot into the live disc and run lsblk, lspci, fdisk, and other commands, only the HDD is recognized, therefore I'm trapped, unable to reinstall or log into my Linux. I'd be grateful for any assistance.

when i lsblk -o +fstype,label,uuid run i get the below image <br>


at this point i don't know what to do again.

Best Answer

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,203 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓
    You must follow this procedure EXACTLY!!!!

    (1) Boot to regular Windows (not SAFE MODE yet) in RST mode
    (2) Press WIN+R. Enter 'msconfig'
    (3) Click boot tab and checkmark Safe Boot
    (4) Shut down Windows normally
    (5) Turn machine on and IMMEDIATELY tap F2 to enter BIOS menu
    (6) Change SATA mode from iRST to AHCI. Press F10 to save settings and exit.
    (7) Windows should boot to SAFE  MODE and automatically install the AHCI drivers
    (8) Press WIN+R. Enter 'msconfig'
    (9) Click boot tab and UNcheckmark Safe Boot
    (10) Shut down Windows Safe Boot normally
    (11) Turn machine on and check that regular Windows boots OK in AHCI  mode
    (12) Press WIN+R. Enter 'diskmgmt.msc'
    (13) Shrink Windows C : \  partition to create enough unallocated free space for the Linux installation 
    (14) Shut down Windows normally. Then reboot to make sure the shrunken Windows partition boots normally

    You should now be ready to boot from the Linux installation USB stick using the F12 boot option.

    Jack E/NJ

Answers

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,203 Trailblazer
    Please post a phone photo of the BIOS INFORMATION tab.

    Jack E/NJ

  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    edited May 2022
    Sorry for the late replt <3

    here are my Bios information image.


    {Thread was edited to add model name to the title}



  • AnhEZ28
    AnhEZ28 ACE, Member Posts: 4,689 Pathfinder
    @Lulztigre try to navigate to the Main tab, press CTRL+S and change the SATA mode to AHCI.
    Please remember to include @AnhEZ28 when you want to reply back to my comment so that I can check your response.
    Thank you and have a nice day!
  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    @AnhEZ28 i did that and i get this errors


  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    and this error
  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    sorry i sent the image separately,  my phone camera was putting them at about 24mb per size, had to compress them
  • AnhEZ28
    AnhEZ28 ACE, Member Posts: 4,689 Pathfinder
    @Lulztigre choose Advanced options, Troubleshoot, Advanced options, change startup settings, and restart. After that when the startup settings screen shows up, press 4 or F4 and wait for the Safe mode to boot up and finally restart the Windows.
    Please remember to include @AnhEZ28 when you want to reply back to my comment so that I can check your response.
    Thank you and have a nice day!
  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    @AnhEZ28 for some reason my pc won't go past here after image 3, so i can't get to the advanced option menu





  • AnhEZ28
    AnhEZ28 ACE, Member Posts: 4,689 Pathfinder
    @Lulztigre hold the power button to force shutdown the laptop and try again
    Please remember to include @AnhEZ28 when you want to reply back to my comment so that I can check your response.
    Thank you and have a nice day!
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,203 Trailblazer
    Sorry, if you want dual boot, you must first back up your personal files on both the WD SSD and the Toshiba HDD. Linux cannot yet be installed in Intel's RST mode and must be changed to AHCI mode..If you can still boot into Windows in RST mode, we can try to change the mode to AHCI without losing data on both drives.

    So can you still boot into Windows in RST  mode?



    Jack E/NJ

  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    @AnhEZ28 i changed to RsT back to ahci when they troubleshooter was been stucked, however I'm in safe mode already 
  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    @JackE i can boot into windows with RST mode just fine.
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,203 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓
    You must follow this procedure EXACTLY!!!!

    (1) Boot to regular Windows (not SAFE MODE yet) in RST mode
    (2) Press WIN+R. Enter 'msconfig'
    (3) Click boot tab and checkmark Safe Boot
    (4) Shut down Windows normally
    (5) Turn machine on and IMMEDIATELY tap F2 to enter BIOS menu
    (6) Change SATA mode from iRST to AHCI. Press F10 to save settings and exit.
    (7) Windows should boot to SAFE  MODE and automatically install the AHCI drivers
    (8) Press WIN+R. Enter 'msconfig'
    (9) Click boot tab and UNcheckmark Safe Boot
    (10) Shut down Windows Safe Boot normally
    (11) Turn machine on and check that regular Windows boots OK in AHCI  mode
    (12) Press WIN+R. Enter 'diskmgmt.msc'
    (13) Shrink Windows C : \  partition to create enough unallocated free space for the Linux installation 
    (14) Shut down Windows normally. Then reboot to make sure the shrunken Windows partition boots normally

    You should now be ready to boot from the Linux installation USB stick using the F12 boot option.

    Jack E/NJ

  • batmalin
    batmalin Member Posts: 4,231 Guru
    Fast boot should be disabled as well.
    Please click "Yes" if I have answered your question.
    Userbench: https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/31177158

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,203 Trailblazer
    >>>Fast boot should be disabled as well.>>>

    Yes, that too. Good point.

    Jack E/NJ

  • Lulztigre
    Lulztigre Member Posts: 12

    Tinkerer

    JackE said:
    You must follow this procedure EXACTLY!!!!

    (1) Boot to regular Windows (not SAFE MODE yet) in RST mode
    (2) Press WIN+R. Enter 'msconfig'
    (3) Click boot tab and checkmark Safe Boot
    (4) Shut down Windows normally
    (5) Turn machine on and IMMEDIATELY tap F2 to enter BIOS menu
    (6) Change SATA mode from iRST to AHCI. Press F10 to save settings and exit.
    (7) Windows should boot to SAFE  MODE and automatically install the AHCI drivers
    (8) Press WIN+R. Enter 'msconfig'
    (9) Click boot tab and UNcheckmark Safe Boot
    (10) Shut down Windows Safe Boot normally
    (11) Turn machine on and check that regular Windows boots OK in AHCI  mode
    (12) Press WIN+R. Enter 'diskmgmt.msc'
    (13) Shrink Windows C : \  partition to create enough unallocated free space for the Linux installation 
    (14) Shut down Windows normally. Then reboot to make sure the shrunken Windows partition boots normally

    You should now be ready to boot from the Linux installation USB stick using the F12 boot option.
    thank you, this worked for me, i can see all of  my partitions now
  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 45,203 Trailblazer
    Congratulations. Thanks for reporting back on your success. :)

    Jack E/NJ