I’m trying to update my grub boot order back to booting the first option instead of the second, so I run sudo nano /etc/default/grub
, but it brings up this, which is not the file I want to edit.
I’m trying to update my grub boot order back to booting the first option instead of the second, so I run sudo nano /etc/default/grub
, but it brings up this, which is not the file I want to edit.
THanks! but I’m getting the error
cp: cannot stat '/usr/share/grub/default/grub': No such file or directory
when running this.What version of Ubuntu are you using?
What is the output of the following command?:
dpkg -l | grep grub
If you urgently want your grub menu to default to the first entry that can be done first, but unless that’s needed I’d prefer to get to the root of the problem(s) and get a proper fix.
I’m using fedora 38
Ahh, sorry.
For Fedora it looks like the default /etc/default/grub looks like this:
GRUB_TIMEOUT=5 GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR="$(sed 's, release .*$,,g' /etc/system-release)" GRUB_DEFAULT=saved GRUB_DISABLE_SUBMENU=true GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT="console" GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="rhgb quiet" GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true" GRUB_ENABLE_BLSCFG=true
( Taken from https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/how-to-regenerate-etc-default-grub/72677/9 )
If you’re using LVM / LUKS you may need additional kernel parameters, like resume=… for suspend to disk to work properly.
Please, before doing anything else, post the output of the following:
cat /proc/cmdline
And make a backup of your existing grub.cfg with:
sudo cp /boot/grub2/grub.cfg /boot/grub2/grub.cfg-backup-$(date --iso=s)
Also, be sure that you have a LiveUSB on hand. You don’t want to be SOL if we break something and can’t boot again without fixing it first.
This command doesn’t work for me