Dear all, I am on a system which used to dual-boot between Debian GNU/Linux and MS-Windows. I have shared couple of screenshots to show the structure of how Debian/GNU linux looks within MS-Windows. For some reason, I'm unable to get grub screen and only get the MS-Windows bootloader.
The install I had done was in legacy mode when I had Debian installed and subsequently had changed the boot mode from legacy to EFI (on suggestion from a debian DD and it worked for quite sometime.) Now though the situation is such, I am unable to boot into Debian using MS-bootloader. Now while there are a few methods [1, 2, 3] by which I could arguably get into Linux, I am looking to see what would be the recommended way. A search on the Debian wiki didn't give any help except [4] and I'm not sure that would be a good way. FWIW, I did look into /boot via DiskInternals Linux reader and found that /boot/efi/ is empty while /boot/grub/x86_64-efi/grub.efi is present. 1. https://www.supergrubdisk.org/super-grub2-disk/ 2. https://itsfoss.com/no-grub-windows-linux/ 3. https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall 4. https://wiki.debian.org/BootLoader Would somebody tell/share what would be the recommended method in the above scenario of all the tools. -- Regards, Shirish Agarwal शिरीष अग्रवाल My quotes in this email licensed under CC 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ http://flossexperiences.wordpress.com E493 D466 6D67 59F5 1FD0 930F 870E 9A5B 5869 609C