Ubuntu install hangs at “Installing the 'grub2' package…”












2















So i'm trying to install Ubuntu on my laptop, it seems to work fine until it tries to install grub. I haven't seen progress the past hour and this is the second attempt.



I'm trying to install 13.10, using a Linux Live USB. I don't care about the contents of the laptop.



I've been trying to find instructions about installing grub before starting the installation, hoping that would solve my issues, but I came up empty.



Laptop is 2 years old, it used to run dual-boot windows 7 and Ubuntu. I'm now doing a fresh install of just Ubuntu.



I hope anyone knows how I can find out why it is happening.










share|improve this question























  • Could you describe your partitions and error message if anyone is shown.

    – yilmi
    Dec 17 '13 at 20:52











  • I haven't seen any error message. I just rebooted to get you the partition info, currently it shows me 3 partitions: 510MB efi, 495GB ext4 and 4 GB Swap. at /dev/sda1 through 3.

    – Asteryz
    Dec 17 '13 at 21:03


















2















So i'm trying to install Ubuntu on my laptop, it seems to work fine until it tries to install grub. I haven't seen progress the past hour and this is the second attempt.



I'm trying to install 13.10, using a Linux Live USB. I don't care about the contents of the laptop.



I've been trying to find instructions about installing grub before starting the installation, hoping that would solve my issues, but I came up empty.



Laptop is 2 years old, it used to run dual-boot windows 7 and Ubuntu. I'm now doing a fresh install of just Ubuntu.



I hope anyone knows how I can find out why it is happening.










share|improve this question























  • Could you describe your partitions and error message if anyone is shown.

    – yilmi
    Dec 17 '13 at 20:52











  • I haven't seen any error message. I just rebooted to get you the partition info, currently it shows me 3 partitions: 510MB efi, 495GB ext4 and 4 GB Swap. at /dev/sda1 through 3.

    – Asteryz
    Dec 17 '13 at 21:03
















2












2








2


2






So i'm trying to install Ubuntu on my laptop, it seems to work fine until it tries to install grub. I haven't seen progress the past hour and this is the second attempt.



I'm trying to install 13.10, using a Linux Live USB. I don't care about the contents of the laptop.



I've been trying to find instructions about installing grub before starting the installation, hoping that would solve my issues, but I came up empty.



Laptop is 2 years old, it used to run dual-boot windows 7 and Ubuntu. I'm now doing a fresh install of just Ubuntu.



I hope anyone knows how I can find out why it is happening.










share|improve this question














So i'm trying to install Ubuntu on my laptop, it seems to work fine until it tries to install grub. I haven't seen progress the past hour and this is the second attempt.



I'm trying to install 13.10, using a Linux Live USB. I don't care about the contents of the laptop.



I've been trying to find instructions about installing grub before starting the installation, hoping that would solve my issues, but I came up empty.



Laptop is 2 years old, it used to run dual-boot windows 7 and Ubuntu. I'm now doing a fresh install of just Ubuntu.



I hope anyone knows how I can find out why it is happening.







installation grub2






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 17 '13 at 20:34









AsteryzAsteryz

13113




13113













  • Could you describe your partitions and error message if anyone is shown.

    – yilmi
    Dec 17 '13 at 20:52











  • I haven't seen any error message. I just rebooted to get you the partition info, currently it shows me 3 partitions: 510MB efi, 495GB ext4 and 4 GB Swap. at /dev/sda1 through 3.

    – Asteryz
    Dec 17 '13 at 21:03





















  • Could you describe your partitions and error message if anyone is shown.

    – yilmi
    Dec 17 '13 at 20:52











  • I haven't seen any error message. I just rebooted to get you the partition info, currently it shows me 3 partitions: 510MB efi, 495GB ext4 and 4 GB Swap. at /dev/sda1 through 3.

    – Asteryz
    Dec 17 '13 at 21:03



















Could you describe your partitions and error message if anyone is shown.

– yilmi
Dec 17 '13 at 20:52





Could you describe your partitions and error message if anyone is shown.

– yilmi
Dec 17 '13 at 20:52













I haven't seen any error message. I just rebooted to get you the partition info, currently it shows me 3 partitions: 510MB efi, 495GB ext4 and 4 GB Swap. at /dev/sda1 through 3.

– Asteryz
Dec 17 '13 at 21:03







I haven't seen any error message. I just rebooted to get you the partition info, currently it shows me 3 partitions: 510MB efi, 495GB ext4 and 4 GB Swap. at /dev/sda1 through 3.

– Asteryz
Dec 17 '13 at 21:03












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














During the installation, there's a way to skip installing grub. Look at the "Device for boot loader installation" dropdown.



Instead of choosing the entire device "/dev/sda", choose the partition you'll install Ubuntu, such as: "/dev/sda1"



Device for bootloader installation dropdown menu



If you choose "dev/sda", you're supposed to rewrite the boot record for the entire drive, which I believe is what's your issue is all about.



But when you choose "dev/sda1" (or sda2,sda3...) you get to place the boot flag at the beginning of the partition, not the entire drive. That does not make you go for a change in your bootloader. In other words, you place a boot flag as a "subtitle" to your pre-existing bootloader.



After you apply the fix, if you ever want to switch to Grub2 for any reason, use the Ubuntu Boot Repair disk: Ubuntu Boot Repair



If all else fails, try to "rewrite your MBR" because during your uninstallation of Windows, its boot sector may have accidentally remained there. Since you are doing a fresh install of Ubuntu, this may stand as the final option since there's a small chance that Ubuntu failed to handle your Windows partition's boot flags correctly.






share|improve this answer































    1














    In case you have issue when installing on UEFI BIOS (not sure if this issue is adressed only to Acer Laptops) there is a topic here that helped me solve this issue.



    I will copy the commands in case it disappears, but all credit goes to Pueseso from Acer Community forum.



    -- Boot Ubuntu Live USB
    -- open terminal
    sudo -s
    ubiquity -b
    -- Press Continue testing after installation is over.

    --Now we will return to the CLI ( https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall )

    sudo mount /dev/sda2 /mnt #sda2 is the root partition
    sudo mkdir /mnt/boot/efi
    sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/boot/efi #sda1 is the efi partition
    for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys; do sudo mount -B $i /mnt$i; done

    modprobe efivars # make sure this is loaded

    -- notice the bootx64 file
    efibootmgr --verbose

    -- We will reinstall grub-install for a 64bit version
    apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64

    grub-install —no-nvram —root-directory=/mnt
    chroot /mnt
    update-grub
    cd /boot/efi/EFI
    cp -R ubuntu BOOT
    cd BOOT
    cp grubx64.efi bootx64.efi

    -- You are finished, reboot the system.





    share|improve this answer

































      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      4














      During the installation, there's a way to skip installing grub. Look at the "Device for boot loader installation" dropdown.



      Instead of choosing the entire device "/dev/sda", choose the partition you'll install Ubuntu, such as: "/dev/sda1"



      Device for bootloader installation dropdown menu



      If you choose "dev/sda", you're supposed to rewrite the boot record for the entire drive, which I believe is what's your issue is all about.



      But when you choose "dev/sda1" (or sda2,sda3...) you get to place the boot flag at the beginning of the partition, not the entire drive. That does not make you go for a change in your bootloader. In other words, you place a boot flag as a "subtitle" to your pre-existing bootloader.



      After you apply the fix, if you ever want to switch to Grub2 for any reason, use the Ubuntu Boot Repair disk: Ubuntu Boot Repair



      If all else fails, try to "rewrite your MBR" because during your uninstallation of Windows, its boot sector may have accidentally remained there. Since you are doing a fresh install of Ubuntu, this may stand as the final option since there's a small chance that Ubuntu failed to handle your Windows partition's boot flags correctly.






      share|improve this answer




























        4














        During the installation, there's a way to skip installing grub. Look at the "Device for boot loader installation" dropdown.



        Instead of choosing the entire device "/dev/sda", choose the partition you'll install Ubuntu, such as: "/dev/sda1"



        Device for bootloader installation dropdown menu



        If you choose "dev/sda", you're supposed to rewrite the boot record for the entire drive, which I believe is what's your issue is all about.



        But when you choose "dev/sda1" (or sda2,sda3...) you get to place the boot flag at the beginning of the partition, not the entire drive. That does not make you go for a change in your bootloader. In other words, you place a boot flag as a "subtitle" to your pre-existing bootloader.



        After you apply the fix, if you ever want to switch to Grub2 for any reason, use the Ubuntu Boot Repair disk: Ubuntu Boot Repair



        If all else fails, try to "rewrite your MBR" because during your uninstallation of Windows, its boot sector may have accidentally remained there. Since you are doing a fresh install of Ubuntu, this may stand as the final option since there's a small chance that Ubuntu failed to handle your Windows partition's boot flags correctly.






        share|improve this answer


























          4












          4








          4







          During the installation, there's a way to skip installing grub. Look at the "Device for boot loader installation" dropdown.



          Instead of choosing the entire device "/dev/sda", choose the partition you'll install Ubuntu, such as: "/dev/sda1"



          Device for bootloader installation dropdown menu



          If you choose "dev/sda", you're supposed to rewrite the boot record for the entire drive, which I believe is what's your issue is all about.



          But when you choose "dev/sda1" (or sda2,sda3...) you get to place the boot flag at the beginning of the partition, not the entire drive. That does not make you go for a change in your bootloader. In other words, you place a boot flag as a "subtitle" to your pre-existing bootloader.



          After you apply the fix, if you ever want to switch to Grub2 for any reason, use the Ubuntu Boot Repair disk: Ubuntu Boot Repair



          If all else fails, try to "rewrite your MBR" because during your uninstallation of Windows, its boot sector may have accidentally remained there. Since you are doing a fresh install of Ubuntu, this may stand as the final option since there's a small chance that Ubuntu failed to handle your Windows partition's boot flags correctly.






          share|improve this answer













          During the installation, there's a way to skip installing grub. Look at the "Device for boot loader installation" dropdown.



          Instead of choosing the entire device "/dev/sda", choose the partition you'll install Ubuntu, such as: "/dev/sda1"



          Device for bootloader installation dropdown menu



          If you choose "dev/sda", you're supposed to rewrite the boot record for the entire drive, which I believe is what's your issue is all about.



          But when you choose "dev/sda1" (or sda2,sda3...) you get to place the boot flag at the beginning of the partition, not the entire drive. That does not make you go for a change in your bootloader. In other words, you place a boot flag as a "subtitle" to your pre-existing bootloader.



          After you apply the fix, if you ever want to switch to Grub2 for any reason, use the Ubuntu Boot Repair disk: Ubuntu Boot Repair



          If all else fails, try to "rewrite your MBR" because during your uninstallation of Windows, its boot sector may have accidentally remained there. Since you are doing a fresh install of Ubuntu, this may stand as the final option since there's a small chance that Ubuntu failed to handle your Windows partition's boot flags correctly.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 17 '13 at 21:06









          Doruk KarıncaDoruk Karınca

          22214




          22214

























              1














              In case you have issue when installing on UEFI BIOS (not sure if this issue is adressed only to Acer Laptops) there is a topic here that helped me solve this issue.



              I will copy the commands in case it disappears, but all credit goes to Pueseso from Acer Community forum.



              -- Boot Ubuntu Live USB
              -- open terminal
              sudo -s
              ubiquity -b
              -- Press Continue testing after installation is over.

              --Now we will return to the CLI ( https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall )

              sudo mount /dev/sda2 /mnt #sda2 is the root partition
              sudo mkdir /mnt/boot/efi
              sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/boot/efi #sda1 is the efi partition
              for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys; do sudo mount -B $i /mnt$i; done

              modprobe efivars # make sure this is loaded

              -- notice the bootx64 file
              efibootmgr --verbose

              -- We will reinstall grub-install for a 64bit version
              apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64

              grub-install —no-nvram —root-directory=/mnt
              chroot /mnt
              update-grub
              cd /boot/efi/EFI
              cp -R ubuntu BOOT
              cd BOOT
              cp grubx64.efi bootx64.efi

              -- You are finished, reboot the system.





              share|improve this answer






























                1














                In case you have issue when installing on UEFI BIOS (not sure if this issue is adressed only to Acer Laptops) there is a topic here that helped me solve this issue.



                I will copy the commands in case it disappears, but all credit goes to Pueseso from Acer Community forum.



                -- Boot Ubuntu Live USB
                -- open terminal
                sudo -s
                ubiquity -b
                -- Press Continue testing after installation is over.

                --Now we will return to the CLI ( https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall )

                sudo mount /dev/sda2 /mnt #sda2 is the root partition
                sudo mkdir /mnt/boot/efi
                sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/boot/efi #sda1 is the efi partition
                for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys; do sudo mount -B $i /mnt$i; done

                modprobe efivars # make sure this is loaded

                -- notice the bootx64 file
                efibootmgr --verbose

                -- We will reinstall grub-install for a 64bit version
                apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64

                grub-install —no-nvram —root-directory=/mnt
                chroot /mnt
                update-grub
                cd /boot/efi/EFI
                cp -R ubuntu BOOT
                cd BOOT
                cp grubx64.efi bootx64.efi

                -- You are finished, reboot the system.





                share|improve this answer




























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  In case you have issue when installing on UEFI BIOS (not sure if this issue is adressed only to Acer Laptops) there is a topic here that helped me solve this issue.



                  I will copy the commands in case it disappears, but all credit goes to Pueseso from Acer Community forum.



                  -- Boot Ubuntu Live USB
                  -- open terminal
                  sudo -s
                  ubiquity -b
                  -- Press Continue testing after installation is over.

                  --Now we will return to the CLI ( https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall )

                  sudo mount /dev/sda2 /mnt #sda2 is the root partition
                  sudo mkdir /mnt/boot/efi
                  sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/boot/efi #sda1 is the efi partition
                  for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys; do sudo mount -B $i /mnt$i; done

                  modprobe efivars # make sure this is loaded

                  -- notice the bootx64 file
                  efibootmgr --verbose

                  -- We will reinstall grub-install for a 64bit version
                  apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64

                  grub-install —no-nvram —root-directory=/mnt
                  chroot /mnt
                  update-grub
                  cd /boot/efi/EFI
                  cp -R ubuntu BOOT
                  cd BOOT
                  cp grubx64.efi bootx64.efi

                  -- You are finished, reboot the system.





                  share|improve this answer















                  In case you have issue when installing on UEFI BIOS (not sure if this issue is adressed only to Acer Laptops) there is a topic here that helped me solve this issue.



                  I will copy the commands in case it disappears, but all credit goes to Pueseso from Acer Community forum.



                  -- Boot Ubuntu Live USB
                  -- open terminal
                  sudo -s
                  ubiquity -b
                  -- Press Continue testing after installation is over.

                  --Now we will return to the CLI ( https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall )

                  sudo mount /dev/sda2 /mnt #sda2 is the root partition
                  sudo mkdir /mnt/boot/efi
                  sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/boot/efi #sda1 is the efi partition
                  for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys; do sudo mount -B $i /mnt$i; done

                  modprobe efivars # make sure this is loaded

                  -- notice the bootx64 file
                  efibootmgr --verbose

                  -- We will reinstall grub-install for a 64bit version
                  apt-get install --reinstall grub-efi-amd64

                  grub-install —no-nvram —root-directory=/mnt
                  chroot /mnt
                  update-grub
                  cd /boot/efi/EFI
                  cp -R ubuntu BOOT
                  cd BOOT
                  cp grubx64.efi bootx64.efi

                  -- You are finished, reboot the system.






                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jan 17 at 10:16

























                  answered Nov 25 '17 at 17:43









                  SindisSindis

                  1113




                  1113















                      Popular posts from this blog

                      How to make a Squid Proxy server?

                      第一次世界大戦

                      Touch on Surface Book