When installing the GRUB version above, I got symbol grub_is_shim_lock_enabled not found
and can’t boot, so I downgraded back to grub-2:2.06.r566.g857af0e17-1-x86_64. I tried --disable-shim-lock
but it didn’t help. I don’t secure boot and don’t use TPM.
Package was pushed just 5 hours ago, anyone by chance ran into the same problem?
EDIT:
Tried again today, worked. Problem was likely caused because I installed GRUB into the “arch” NVRAM entry (esp/EFI/arch) instead of the Fallback which my board only supports (esp/EFI/BOOT). To do this add --removable
to grub-install. The full procedure is:
# grub-install --removable /dev/sdX ## or /dev/nvme0nX
# grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
I just upgraded and didn’t have any issues. I’m not experienced in this regard at all. But just to be sure, did you execute the following after the upgrade?
sudo grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/boot/efi sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
Assuming of course your grub setup doesn’t differ from mine. These two commands are all I know about grub troubleshooting…
Did
grub-install /dev/sdX
, x86_64-efi and ESP get detected automatically and no errors were reported. Also created grub config. Will try in a few days again. Maybe I really overlooked something or had “bad luck”. Worked fine in a VM.Could the BIOS firmware have a part in this or is the BIOS firmware irrelevant to the bootloaders functionality?
Just installed the package… Rebooted… No issue… Did not install via grub-install yet though… Will be formating my system soon anyway so I will let you know if i get the same issue.
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Had the problem only on one machine. Do you have, by chance, a MSI motherboard? Can’t myself think of other causes and having the kernel and initrd on btrfs instead of ext4 can’t be the problem?
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Do you have GRUB installed into the ESPs fallback path? (esp/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI) I haven’t tried
grub-install --removable
yet, but maybe stuff got confused.No, I only had grub in its default path. I’ve folded now though. Moved to systemd-boot. Works fine and config seems cleaner. Cannot recommend with just a few days of experience of course.
I find systemd-boot so much easier to use and it’s configuration is much smaller. So maybe consider to switch (if you are on UEFI).