![]() ![]() The only way to boot Linux now is to use the BIOS boot manager (F11 on my BIOS) and select the GRUB boot loader manually. However, it did "something" that makes the UEFI firmware immediately select the Windows Boot Manager rather than GRUB on power-up. It installed Windows Boot Manager onto the same UEFI partition, and left the Ubuntu intact (great!) and that boots fine into Windows 10. ![]() Then I installed Windows 10 Pro from a recently downloaded ISO. GRUB boots that just fine, and I see the GRUB boot menu on start-up where I can select whatever items GRUB knows about. I started out by installing Ubuntu 17.04 on my internal NVMe disk, partitioned with GPT to use half the disk, and a separate UEFI boot partition. This is especially important if power goes out and comes back I won't even be in the house. I'm setting up a new computer, and want it to by default boot into Ubuntu, but have the option to select Windows on boot. The problem is which UEFI bootstrap the BIOS chooses to boot from. ![]() The problem is not with "the disk isn't bootable," because both the Windows UEFI bootstrap and the Grub UEFI bootstrap are bootable. The problem is not with Grub Grub does the right thing when the BIOS starts it. How can I make the BIOS prefer GRUB over Windows Boot Manager on the same UEFI boot partition? ![]()
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