[Bug 1302939] Re: Installing Ubuntu 14.04 on Lenovo H520 leads to unbootable system
Phillip Susi
psusi at ubuntu.com
Sat Apr 5 16:11:44 UTC 2014
It sounds like you have already troubleshot the issue and identified it
as a broken bios. As such, there isn't really anything we can do on
this end. For the sake of completeness though, could you post the exact
boot catalog before, and after rebooting?
** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1302939
Title:
Installing Ubuntu 14.04 on Lenovo H520 leads to unbootable system
Status in “ubiquity” package in Ubuntu:
Incomplete
Bug description:
System: Lenovo H520
The system uses UEFI, I tried several combinations of settings.
With UEFI mode enabled, SecureBoot enabled:
* After the initial installer reboot the system boots with an error:
"Invalid Signature Detected".
With UEFI mode enabled, SecureBoot enabled and Setup Mode enabled:
* After the initial installer reboot the system boots successfully.
Subsequent reboots lead to the error: "Error 1962 No operating system
found"
With UEFI mode enabled, SecureBoot disabled:
* The system always reboots to the error: "Error 1962 No operating
system found"
It appears that something in Lenovo's UEFI does not like how the efi
boot parameters are configured by Ubuntu. On the first reboot the
parameters display the ubuntu entry with a hard drive specification.
On the subsequent reboots the system UEFI appears to replace the
setting with the value "Vendor(99e275e7-75a0-4b37-a2e6-c5385e6c00cb,)
". I haven't been able to find out which Vendor that UUID represents.
However, looking in the UEFI boot settings after this shows ubuntu
listed in the boot order under an "Unknown device".
As a workaround, I enabled CSM mode and set the system to "Legacy
BIOS" and installed Ubuntu 14.04 successfully with no booting issues.
However, I now lost the additional protection of a signed bootloader
and a non-technical person would not find this fiddling in the bios
settings to be a good user experience.
Expected behavior:
The Ubiquity installer could configure the EFI boot parameters in such
a way that they are more generally recognizable by different UEFI
implementations. In this particular case the UEFI was not
understanding the settings as the SATA1 device but instead marked them
as "Unknown device".
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