sahinakkaya.dev/_posts/2022-03-03-never-get-trapped-in-grub-rescue-again.md
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Never Get Trapped in Grub Rescue Again! 2022-03-03 03:46:00 +0300 wide linux grub partition uefi

Anytime I install a new system on my machine, I pray God for nothing bad happens. But it usually happens. When I reboot, I find myself in the "Grub rescue" menu and I don't know how to fix things from that point.

I go into the live environment and run some random commands that I found on the internet and hope for the best.

me trying to fix grub

What a nice way to shoot myself in the foot! But this time is different. This time, I f*cked up so much that even the random commands on the internet could not help me. I was on my own and I needed to figure out what is wrong with my system. Let me tell you what I did:

I decided to install another OS just to try it in a real machine. I wanted to shrink one of my partitions to create a space for the new system. I run fdisk /dev/sdb, the very first message that it tells me was

This disk is currently in use - repartitioning is probably a bad idea. It's recommended to umount all file systems, and swapoff all swap partitions on this disk.

Yes, it just screams "Do not do it!" but come on. I will not try to shrink the partition I am using (sdb3). So it should not be a problem. I ignored the message and shrink it anyway. No problem. Installed and tested the new OS a little bit. Time to reboot and hope for the best. And of course it did not boot. What would I even expecting?

ah sh\*t here we go again

As always, I booted into a live environment and run boot-repair command. It was always working but this time... Even after finishing the operation successfully I could not boot into neither Arch nor Ubuntu (the two systems I had previously).

Arch was originally mounted in sdb3 and Ubuntu was in sda2. Considering the fact that I only messed with sdb, I should be able to boot Ubuntu, right? Well, yeah. Technically I did boot into Ubuntu but I didn't see the login screen. It was dropping me into something called "Emergency mode" which just makes me panic! sudo update-grub... Nope. Nothing changes. Arch does not boot and Ubuntu partially boots.

Let me tell you what the problem was and how my ignorance made it worse:

  • While installing the new system, I saw a partition labelled "Microsoft Basic Data". I deleted it thinking it is not required because I don't use W*ndows. It turns out, it was my boot partition for Arch, just labelled incorrectly... Big lolz :D But we will see this is not even important because I had to rewrite my boot partition anyway.

  • My Arch was installed in sdb3. When I created a new partition and installed the new system, sdb3 was shifted to sdb5 even though I did not ask for it. But the grub configuration to boot my system was still pointing to sdb3. That was the reason why Arch does not boot. It was trying to boot from sdb3. So I had to recreate grub configuration and reinstall grub to fix it. I run the following commands that I found here in a live Arch environment:

    mkdir /mnt/arch
    mount -t auto /dev/sdb5 /mnt/arch
    arch-chroot /mnt/arch
    mount -t auto /dev/sdb4 /boot/efi
    os-prober
    grub-mkconfig > /boot/grub/grub.cfg
    grub-install --efi-directory=/boot/efi --target=x86_64-efi /dev/sdb
    exit
    reboot
    

    And it fixed my grub. I can now boot into Arch, hooray!

  • Ubuntu was not still booting properly. I checked the logs with journalctl -xb and saw something related with sdb. Ubuntu was installed in sda2, why sdb should be a problem? Then I remembered something. Back in times when I was using Ubuntu, I was using sdb1 as a secondary storage. So I had a configuration where it automatically mounts sdb1 on startup. Since I messed with sdb1 , it was failing to mount it. I opened /etc/fstab, and deleted the related line. Bingo! It started booting properly.

    i am something of a hackerman myself

  • I started feeling like Hackerman, and I said to myself "You know what, Imma fix everything." I had a very sh*tty grub menu with useless grub entries from old systems that I don't use anymore. The UEFI also had the same problem. It had ridiculous amount of boot entries that most of them are just trash.

    the pictures i took while trying to figure out which boot options are useless

    These are the pictures I took for reference while trying to figure out which boot options are useless. Sorry for the bad quality. I didn't think I would use them in a blog post.

    • While trying to fix the previous problems, I've spent enough time in the /boot/efi directory that make me understand where these grub entries are coming from. There were a lot of files belong to old systems. I simply deleted them and updated grub. All of the bad entries were gone. I want to draw your attention here: I did not search for how to delete the unused grub entries. I just knew deleting their directories from /boot/efi will do the job. I am doing this sh*t! (Another hackerman moment :D )
    • In order to delete useless boot options from UEFI menu, I used efibootmgr. I searched for it on the internet, of course!
    efibootmgr -v # Check which entries you want to delete, say it is 0003.
    sudo efibootmgr -b 0003 -B # This will delete third boot option. 
    

And finally! I know everything about how all these work. Another shady part of Linux is clear for me. Now:

Give me a ruined computer and an Arch ISO, and I shall fix it for you.