![]() I would try disabling secure boot and trying again if it is on. One thumb drive can take the place of a bunch of them, with the Windows installer, several flavors of Linux, and various rescue and diagnostic ISOs all being available from a single USB (selected by a menu at boot time). I now use Ventoy for all of my live session/ISO installer stuff, where I can just copy the ISO over to the drive and boot it as an ISO. I would try writing the ISOs on another program besides Rufus just to make sure. Whether it was a function of the drive itself (seems unlikely) or the way the drive was written by the ISO software (more likely), I do not know, but it was frustrating. I have seen thumb drives set up as Linux live USBs that won’t boot on one UEFI PC but will boot on another (secure boot off on both). On this setup, I have two SSDs (NVMe), with the EFI partition, /boot partition for Linux, and the original factory installation of Windows on one SSD and Linux (/root, /home, /swap partitions) on the second (whole drive encrypted) SSD.Īs for the failure of Linux live USBs to boot… GRUB appeared again, and I selected Windows 11. I selected restart from the application menu, and it shut down Linux and rebooted. I selected Linux, entered my SED (self encrypting drive) passphrase at the prompt, and it resumed from hibernation successfully, with all my Linux programs I had running present. I again pressed power to turn on and boot, and GRUB appeared. ![]() At that point, both OSes were hibernated. ![]() I selected hibernate from the Windows 11 start menu, and it hibernated successfully. The GRUB menu appeared as usual.įrom GRUB, I selected Windows 11, and it booted successfully while Linux was still hibernated. To test this, I woke my dual-boot PC, my Acer Swift Go 14 laptop (which was booted into Linux) from “sleep,” selected “hibernate” from the application (“Start”) menu, and it hibernated successfully.įrom the hibernated state, I pressed the power button to turn it on and boot. If you do that, GRUB is able to select between hibernated OSes the same way it does for non-hibernated ones, without anything being stored in UEFI NVRAM. I think the key thing isto disable fast boot in UEFI, which I do on all PCs I set up for Linux, dual boot or not. I have used hibernation in dual-boot setups without any issues. ![]()
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