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Re: BIOS Can Not Find Disk



On Sun 03 Dec 2017 at 21:27:20 (-0800), David Christensen wrote:
> On 12/03/17 21:17, David Christensen wrote:
> >But, it was not a total loss -- I can now dissect the SSD.
> 
> More info:
> 
> # lsblk /dev/sda
> NAME   MAJ:MIN RM  SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
> sda      8:0    0 14.9G  0 disk
> |-sda1   8:1    0  953M  0 part
> `-sda2   8:2    0  4.7G  0 part
> 
> # parted /dev/sda u s p free
> Model: ATA SAMSUNG SSD UM41 (scsi)
> Disk /dev/sda: 31277232s
> Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
> Partition Table: gpt
> Disk Flags:
> 
> Number  Start      End        Size       File system  Name     Flags
>         34s        2047s      2014s      Free Space
>  1      2048s      1953791s   1951744s   fat32        ESP      boot, esp
>  2      1953792s   11718655s  9764864s                stretch  lvm
>         11718656s  31277198s  19558543s  Free Space
> 
> 
> Are there any other commands that readers might find interesting
> (before I wipe the SSD)?

I recently reformatted a disk thus:

puck:                       GPT-style, master

Part #  filesys size        code    rôle
puck    -       1007KiB             partition tables and alignment space
puck01  -       3MiB        EF02    bios-boot for Grub (bios_grub flag)
puck02  FAT32   496MiB      EF00    EFI (boot flag)
puck03  ext2    500MiB      8300    /boot (unencrypted)
…

which gdisk shows as

Number  Start (sector)    End (sector)  Size       Code  Name
   1            2048            8191   3.0 MiB     EF02  BIOS boot partition
   2            8192         1023999   496.0 MiB   EF00  EFI System
   3         1024000         2047999   500.0 MiB   8300  Linux filesystem
…

Is the absence of a partition like puck01 on your disk a significant
factor in your failure to install grub?
ie where's grub going to place itself?

Cheers,
David.


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