Now you can reboot your PC and you will see options to boot into Windows.
It will add new entries to the grub menu and update it.
If you see it detect Windows 10 then all you have to do is type the command sudo update-grub and press Enter.In the terminal window type the following command: sudo os-prober and press Enter.Press Ctrl + Alt + T to open the terminal window.Boot into Ubuntu (well, there is no other option at the moment but to boot into Ubuntu).If you are also experiencing a similar problem then you can quickly fix this problem using just two commands. But after installing Ubuntu 16.04.3 on the Windows 10 PC, I found no way to use Windows 10 as the Ubuntu setup somehow failed to add the Windows entry to the Grub menu. And of course, you can always use the powerful Ubuntu Linux on the same PC any time you want.
So this time I decided to install both Windows 10 and Ubuntu 16.04.3 in the dual boot configuration, so that if Windows fails to boot, I can still access all my files using the Ubuntu. Being able to have a functional dual-boot is a big deal for many existing users as well as many prospective ones.After a recent malware attack in my Windows 10 PC, I was unable to use it for many days. There’s no easy option, so it’ll be interesting to see how this plays out ahead of Ubuntu 22.04’s arrival next spring. Ubuntu’s devs are considering whether to re-enable os-prober (“ugh”) to only run os-prober once, during install time (as other Linux distros do) or even creating a new GRUB module “that goes through the UEFI boot options and creates a submenu, then sets BootNext and resets the machine when you select an item”. Thing is: disabling the disabling of OS prober isn’t an ideal fix given those aforementioned security concerns.Ĭonversely, not having a GRUB boot menu with links to boot other installed OSes is a major downgrade on past behaviour Hit save, then run sudo update-grub to let it do its thing.įinally, reboot and et voila: a GRUB menu with stuff in it: As things should be One workaround (for now) is to add GRUB_DISABLE_OS_PROBER=false to /etc/default/grub like so: OS Prober enabled Ubuntu’s Julian Andres Klode acknowledges that this is “…a bit controversial and the outcome is not necessarily in the best interest of our users”.
So, for the moment, Ubuntu 22.04 (or more accurately GRUB in Ubuntu 22.04) does not detect any other operating system during or after install. This is an upstream change designed to counter potential security issues with the OS-detecting feature (it mounts partitions to check for other OSes, this could be taken advantage of, etc). The cause? The OS_prober feature is disabled by default in GRUB 2.06, which is the version included in Ubuntu 22.04. Ostro writes: “If you are multi-booting with other Linuxes and Windows, you might find a problem, when you update/upgrade Ubuntu (maybe with other Linuxes too) sometime now, it’d stop “seeing” other distros and Windows.” Now, if I hadn’t have seen this comment chances are I’d be mashing an F10 key instead of writing this. Regular omg! commenter OstroLK mentioned the issue (and a solution) in the comment section to our post about Ubuntu’s orange overhaul. Turns out there’s a major change to the way GRUB works in Ubuntu 22.04. Was this a quirk of Windows 11? Was I supposed to have used the advanced partition manager to install Ubuntu 22.04? Or was this a sign the universe has it out for me?!
Installing Ubuntu 22.04 gave me a GRUB menu without a Windows boot manager option in it. So what’s going on? OS Prober Disabled in GRUB While a limp push of the F10 key isn’t exactly hard, it is less than preferable. To boot Windows I need to use the boot manager menu. Instead, after I finished installing Jammy and rebooted I could only boot Ubuntu. See, normally when I install Ubuntu alongside Windows as a dual-boot system Ubuntu will add the GRUB boot loader - awesome - and populate that boot loader with links to any other operating systems, such as Windows (or technically boot into the Windows boot manager) - also awesome.Įxcept, that no longer happens when installing Ubuntu 22.04. I bought a new ‘distro testing’ laptop in the Black Friday sale last month (don’t get carried away, it cost me £200 and a lot of headaches) but I only installed Ubuntu 22.04 on it this weekend - and instantly hit a snag.