From alpuzz at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 15:57:54 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 11:57:54 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Message-ID: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I'm not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I've enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I've experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I'm just not sure. I'm guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What's the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you're no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I've seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I'm having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From helen.buus at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 16:17:19 2023 From: helen.buus at gmail.com (faginbagin) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 12:17:19 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> Message-ID: <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: > > Hi all, > > On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows > 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m > not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve > enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with > pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and > then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the > upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of > entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels > will get added as time passes. > > What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re > no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about > the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. > > Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old > Grub. Ah well. > > Thanks, > > --Al > > Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- --- /etc/default/grub.dist 2022-05-03 13:21:59.549524751 -0400 +++ /etc/default/grub 2023-02-09 11:47:33.777429559 -0500 @@ -3,11 +3,12 @@ # For full documentation of the options in this file, see: # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration' -GRUB_DEFAULT=0 -GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden -GRUB_TIMEOUT=0 +GRUB_DEFAULT=saved +GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT=true +#GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE=hidden +GRUB_TIMEOUT=10 GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian` -GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" +GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="" GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="" # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs From alpuzz at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 16:20:05 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 12:20:05 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> Message-ID: <18c6901d99c80$95a4e920$c0eebb60$@gmail.com> Thanks. I may give this a try; but my only fear is if I choose a boot option that doesn’t boot to anything accessible, then it will boot to that same bad option the next time. I guess though worst case scenario, just reboot, down arrow once, rinse, repeat and eventually I’ll get to an accessible OS. LOL. From: Ubuntu-accessibility On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:17 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From helen.buus at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 16:26:42 2023 From: helen.buus at gmail.com (faginbagin) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 12:26:42 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> Message-ID: <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: > On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: >> >> Hi all, >> >> On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside >> Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is >> that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do >> so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented >> with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, >> and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the >> upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of >> entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels >> will get added as time passes. >> >> What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re >> no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about >> the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. >> >> Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old >> Grub. Ah well. >> >> Thanks, >> >> --Al >> >> > Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if > you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice > will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list > allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have > 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes > over time. I hope it helps. Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration HTH -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sonfire11 at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 16:50:56 2023 From: sonfire11 at gmail.com (sonfire11 at gmail.com) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 12:50:56 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> Message-ID: <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> Hi, I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on the beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response forever, and also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also disable all of the extra recovery options. When you are in a terminal window, type sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo password. This will tell you what order the boot managers are in and which one is the default. After the setup, the menu will wait forever, displaying the menu and only give you the active boot options . It will also beep when it is ready for a response. You can also use the efibootmgr to determine what menu option to use for the default OS option. From: Ubuntu-accessibility On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration HTH -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From alpuzz at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 21:23:53 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 17:23:53 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> Message-ID: <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> Thanks! I understand this in principle now; but either something is odd or more likely, I’m still just confused. When I run efibootmgr, I get the following: BootCurrent: 0001 Timeout: 1 seconds BootOrder: 0001,0000,0004,0005,0002,0003 Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager Boot0001* ubuntu Boot0002* Generic Usb Device Boot0003* CD/DVD Device Boot0004* UEFI: PXE IPv4 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM Boot0005* UEFI: PXE IPv6 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM So: Since Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager is the first item in the list, I should be able to make the machine boot to Windows by setting GRUB_DEFAULT=0, and then running update-grub, right? Only problem is GRUB_DEFAULT is already set to 0, and with this setting, the machine boots to Linux. Therefore, I tried grub_default=1, but the machine still boots to Linux. I also tried grub_default=saved, and then playing with the grub-set-default command. Whether I set it to 0 or 1, I still end up in Linux. Playing with the grub-reboot command yields similar results. No matter what values I use for any of these commands, I either end up booting to Linux, or to a place where I don’t have a screen reader and can’t figure out what’s going on. If I didn’t know any better, I would almost think that I am actually booting to the Windows Boot manager, but the Windows boot manager is defaulting to load Ubuntu. Is that even possible? I can’t imagine the Ubuntu 23.04 installer would have modified the Windows boot manager as well as installing Grub? At this point, I may have to connect a monitor and resort to sighted assistance. Very bizarre indeed. Thanks again, --Al From: Ubuntu-accessibility On Behalf Of sonfire11 at gmail.com Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:51 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Hi, I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on the beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response forever, and also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also disable all of the extra recovery options. When you are in a terminal window, type sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo password. This will tell you what order the boot managers are in and which one is the default. After the setup, the menu will wait forever, displaying the menu and only give you the active boot options . It will also beep when it is ready for a response. You can also use the efibootmgr to determine what menu option to use for the default OS option. From: Ubuntu-accessibility > On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration HTH -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From fudge at thefudge.net Sun Jun 11 22:28:35 2023 From: fudge at thefudge.net (Rob Whyte) Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2023 08:28:35 +1000 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> Message-ID: <9d05d3ea-8bed-18d5-35dd-87e703156934@thefudge.net> Push end to go to bottom of list and up arrow once. That is how I reliably do it. I depends on age of system of course. Might be worthwhile trying from the bottom though instead of arrowing down through a growing list of options. cheers On 12/6/23 07:23, Al Puzzuoli wrote: > > Thanks! > > I understand this in principle now; but either something is odd or > more likely, I’m still just confused. > > When I run efibootmgr, I get the following: > > BootCurrent: 0001 > > Timeout: 1 seconds > > BootOrder: 0001,0000,0004,0005,0002,0003 > > Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager > > Boot0001* ubuntu > > Boot0002* Generic Usb Device > > Boot0003* CD/DVD Device > > Boot0004* UEFI: PXE IPv4 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM > > Boot0005* UEFI: PXE IPv6 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM > > So: > > Since Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager is the first item in the list, I > should be able to make the machine boot to Windows by setting > GRUB_DEFAULT=0, and then running update-grub, right? Only problem is > GRUB_DEFAULT is already set to 0, and with this setting, the machine > boots to Linux. Therefore, I tried    grub_default=1, but the machine > still boots to Linux. > > I also tried grub_default=saved, and then playing with the > grub-set-default command. Whether I set it to 0 or 1, I still end up > in Linux. > > Playing with the grub-reboot command yields similar results. No matter > what values I use for any of these commands, I either end up booting > to Linux, or to a place where I don’t have a screen reader and can’t > figure out what’s going on. > > If I didn’t know any better, I would almost think that I am actually > booting to the Windows Boot manager, but the Windows boot manager is > defaulting to load Ubuntu. Is that even possible? I can’t imagine the > Ubuntu 23.04 installer would have modified the Windows boot manager as > well as installing Grub? > > At this point, I may have to connect a monitor and resort to sighted > assistance. Very bizarre indeed. > > Thanks again, > > --Al > > *From:*Ubuntu-accessibility > *On Behalf Of > *sonfire11 at gmail.com > *Sent:* Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:51 PM > *To:* ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com > *Subject:* RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual > boot Scenario? > > Hi, > > I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on the > beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response forever, and > also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also disable all of > the extra recovery options. When you are in a terminal window, type > sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo password. This will tell you > what order the boot managers are in and which one is the default. > After the setup, the menu will wait forever, displaying the menu and > only give you the active boot options . It will > also beep when it is ready for a response. You can also use the > efibootmgr to determine what menu option to use for the default OS option. > > *From:*Ubuntu-accessibility > *On Behalf Of *faginbagin > *Sent:* Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM > *To:* ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com > *Subject:* Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual > boot Scenario? > > On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: > > On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: > > Hi all, > > On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside > Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My > issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows > when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after > the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then > enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I > need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just > not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could > care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get > added as time passes. > > What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like > you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve > seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues > installing that in 23.04. > > Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the > old Grub. Ah well. > > Thanks, > > --Al > > Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, > if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default > choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if > the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I > don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a > lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. > > Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and > makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those > changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot > option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT > as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm > not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, > especially section 6.1: > https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration > > HTH > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sonfire11 at gmail.com Sun Jun 11 22:45:35 2023 From: sonfire11 at gmail.com (sonfire11 at gmail.com) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 18:45:35 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> Message-ID: <001f01d99cb6$6ff52ce0$4fdf86a0$@gmail.com> Hi, The current setup has Ubuntu starting by default. I would really set timeout to -1 so the boot manager waits forever for a response. I have also seen boot managers from different hardware manufacturers that will intercept the grub boot loader and create one based on its settings. So, it would look like this with a grub intercept: * Start your computer. * The (you think) grub menu appears. * Choose (you think) Windows, which is correct. * The computer starts in (you think) windows. Unfortunately, you originally chose Windows boot loader that has Ubuntu as its first option. * Since the current timeout is 1 second, there is no time to respond. It is always weird when a manufacturer will tell grub it isn’t allowed to be the primary boot loader. Instead, the system will manage it on its own, offering both grub and windows boot manager as load options. In this case, get sighted help to figure out the menu structure. From: Al Puzzuoli Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 5:24 PM To: sonfire11 at gmail.com; ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Thanks! I understand this in principle now; but either something is odd or more likely, I’m still just confused. When I run efibootmgr, I get the following: BootCurrent: 0001 Timeout: 1 seconds BootOrder: 0001,0000,0004,0005,0002,0003 Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager Boot0001* ubuntu Boot0002* Generic Usb Device Boot0003* CD/DVD Device Boot0004* UEFI: PXE IPv4 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM Boot0005* UEFI: PXE IPv6 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM So: Since Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager is the first item in the list, I should be able to make the machine boot to Windows by setting GRUB_DEFAULT=0, and then running update-grub, right? Only problem is GRUB_DEFAULT is already set to 0, and with this setting, the machine boots to Linux. Therefore, I tried grub_default=1, but the machine still boots to Linux. I also tried grub_default=saved, and then playing with the grub-set-default command. Whether I set it to 0 or 1, I still end up in Linux. Playing with the grub-reboot command yields similar results. No matter what values I use for any of these commands, I either end up booting to Linux, or to a place where I don’t have a screen reader and can’t figure out what’s going on. If I didn’t know any better, I would almost think that I am actually booting to the Windows Boot manager, but the Windows boot manager is defaulting to load Ubuntu. Is that even possible? I can’t imagine the Ubuntu 23.04 installer would have modified the Windows boot manager as well as installing Grub? At this point, I may have to connect a monitor and resort to sighted assistance. Very bizarre indeed. Thanks again, --Al From: Ubuntu-accessibility > On Behalf Of sonfire11 at gmail.com Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:51 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Hi, I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on the beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response forever, and also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also disable all of the extra recovery options. When you are in a terminal window, type sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo password. This will tell you what order the boot managers are in and which one is the default. After the setup, the menu will wait forever, displaying the menu and only give you the active boot options . It will also beep when it is ready for a response. You can also use the efibootmgr to determine what menu option to use for the default OS option. From: Ubuntu-accessibility > On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration HTH -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From alpuzz at gmail.com Mon Jun 12 00:29:46 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Sun, 11 Jun 2023 20:29:46 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <9d05d3ea-8bed-18d5-35dd-87e703156934@thefudge.net> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> <9d05d3ea-8bed-18d5-35dd-87e703156934@thefudge.net> Message-ID: <18cc801d99cc4$fe14f650$fa3ee2f0$@gmail.com> Thanks to everyone for the help! End and then up arrow once does the trick! That’s good enough for me for now. I’ll play around with figuring out why I can’t set the boot defaults later. --Al From: Rob Whyte Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 6:29 PM To: Al Puzzuoli ; sonfire11 at gmail.com; ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Push end to go to bottom of list and up arrow once. That is how I reliably do it. I depends on age of system of course. Might be worthwhile trying from the bottom though instead of arrowing down through a growing list of options. cheers On 12/6/23 07:23, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Thanks! I understand this in principle now; but either something is odd or more likely, I’m still just confused. When I run efibootmgr, I get the following: BootCurrent: 0001 Timeout: 1 seconds BootOrder: 0001,0000,0004,0005,0002,0003 Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager Boot0001* ubuntu Boot0002* Generic Usb Device Boot0003* CD/DVD Device Boot0004* UEFI: PXE IPv4 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM Boot0005* UEFI: PXE IPv6 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM So: Since Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager is the first item in the list, I should be able to make the machine boot to Windows by setting GRUB_DEFAULT=0, and then running update-grub, right? Only problem is GRUB_DEFAULT is already set to 0, and with this setting, the machine boots to Linux. Therefore, I tried grub_default=1, but the machine still boots to Linux. I also tried grub_default=saved, and then playing with the grub-set-default command. Whether I set it to 0 or 1, I still end up in Linux. Playing with the grub-reboot command yields similar results. No matter what values I use for any of these commands, I either end up booting to Linux, or to a place where I don’t have a screen reader and can’t figure out what’s going on. If I didn’t know any better, I would almost think that I am actually booting to the Windows Boot manager, but the Windows boot manager is defaulting to load Ubuntu. Is that even possible? I can’t imagine the Ubuntu 23.04 installer would have modified the Windows boot manager as well as installing Grub? At this point, I may have to connect a monitor and resort to sighted assistance. Very bizarre indeed. Thanks again, --Al From: Ubuntu-accessibility On Behalf Of sonfire11 at gmail.com Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:51 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Hi, I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on the beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response forever, and also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also disable all of the extra recovery options. When you are in a terminal window, type sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo password. This will tell you what order the boot managers are in and which one is the default. After the setup, the menu will wait forever, displaying the menu and only give you the active boot options . It will also beep when it is ready for a response. You can also use the efibootmgr to determine what menu option to use for the default OS option. From: Ubuntu-accessibility > On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration HTH -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From alpuzz at gmail.com Mon Jun 12 14:10:43 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2023 10:10:43 -0400 Subject: Alt+Super+S Not Working in ubuntu-23.04-desktop-amd64.iso Message-ID: <002601d99d37$adc2b0c0$09481240$@gmail.com> Hi all, I'm experimenting with the various flavors of Ubuntu to see which Desktop I prefer. I had no problems installing Ubuntu Mate; However as the subject says, I downloaded ubuntu-23.04-desktop-amd64.iso yesterday and could not launch the screen reader. I get the startup sound after the system boots, but alt+super+s does nothing. Where's the best place to report this issue, and does anyone know of any alternate working installers in the meantime? Thanks, --Al -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From helen.buus at gmail.com Mon Jun 12 15:56:48 2023 From: helen.buus at gmail.com (faginbagin) Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2023 11:56:48 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <18cc801d99cc4$fe14f650$fa3ee2f0$@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> <9d05d3ea-8bed-18d5-35dd-87e703156934@thefudge.net> <18cc801d99cc4$fe14f650$fa3ee2f0$@gmail.com> Message-ID: <4f618d63-eeaf-7592-25e3-29a983879474@gmail.com> Glad you found a solution that works for you. If you need or want to change things, one thing I wanted to mention, it doesn't look like you need to tinker with efibootmgr to control the boot process. At least not as long as you don't install another OS and are OK using grub2. The output you got from efibootmgr shows that grub2 is the default boot loader that the UEFI boot manager will load, because ubuntu IS grub2. ubuntu, in this case, is just a label for a folder in the EFI partition which contains the grub2 boot loader. How do I know know UEFI boot manager will, by default, hand over control to grub2? Because: BootCurrent = 0001 BootOrder lists 0001 first. Boot0001 points to ubuntu Although it's not shown in your output, ubuntu points to a file in the folder, EFI/ubuntu. You could see that if you ran efibootmgr in verbose mode: efibootmgr -v When you are running the Ubuntu OS, the EFI/ubuntu folder is /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu. You need root permission to examine it. If you execute: sudo ls -l /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu, you should see something like what I see: total 4314 -rwx------ 1 root root     108 May  3 10:47 BOOTX64.CSV -rwx------ 1 root root     126 May  3 10:47 grub.cfg -rwx------ 1 root root 2594696 May  3 10:47 grubx64.efi -rwx------ 1 root root  860824 May  3 10:47 mmx64.efi -rwx------ 1 root root  960472 May  3 10:47 shimx64.efi Hope that's not too much information, or too little! On 6/11/2023 8:29 PM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: > > Thanks to everyone for the help! End and then up arrow once does the > trick! That’s good enough for me for now. I’ll play around with > figuring out why I can’t set the boot defaults later. > > --Al > > *From:*Rob Whyte > *Sent:* Sunday, June 11, 2023 6:29 PM > *To:* Al Puzzuoli ; sonfire11 at gmail.com; > ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com > *Subject:* Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual > boot Scenario? > > Push end to go to bottom of list and up arrow once. > > That is how I reliably do it. > > I depends on age of system of course. > > Might be worthwhile trying from the bottom though instead of arrowing > down through a growing list of options. > > cheers > > On 12/6/23 07:23, Al Puzzuoli wrote: > > Thanks! > > I understand this in principle now; but either something is odd or > more likely, I’m still just confused. > > When I run efibootmgr, I get the following: > > BootCurrent: 0001 > > Timeout: 1 seconds > > BootOrder: 0001,0000,0004,0005,0002,0003 > > Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager > > Boot0001* ubuntu > > Boot0002* Generic Usb Device > > Boot0003* CD/DVD Device > > Boot0004* UEFI: PXE IPv4 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM > > Boot0005* UEFI: PXE IPv6 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM > > So: > > Since Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager is the first item in the > list, I should be able to make the machine boot to Windows by > setting GRUB_DEFAULT=0, and then running update-grub, right? Only > problem is GRUB_DEFAULT is already set to 0, and with this > setting, the machine boots to Linux. Therefore, I tried >    grub_default=1, but the machine still boots to Linux. > > I also tried grub_default=saved, and then playing with the > grub-set-default command. Whether I set it to 0 or 1, I still end > up in Linux. > > Playing with the grub-reboot command yields similar results. No > matter what values I use for any of these commands, I either end > up booting to Linux, or to a place where I don’t have a screen > reader and can’t figure out what’s going on. > > If I didn’t know any better, I would almost think that I am > actually booting to the Windows Boot manager, but the Windows boot > manager is defaulting to load Ubuntu. Is that even possible? I > can’t imagine the Ubuntu 23.04 installer would have modified the > Windows boot manager as well as installing Grub? > > At this point, I may have to connect a monitor and resort to > sighted assistance. Very bizarre indeed. > > Thanks again, > > --Al > > *From:*Ubuntu-accessibility > > *On Behalf > Of *sonfire11 at gmail.com > *Sent:* Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:51 PM > *To:* ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com > *Subject:* RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a > Dual boot Scenario? > > Hi, > > I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on > the beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response > forever, and also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also > disable all of the extra recovery options. When you are in a > terminal window, type sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo > password. This will tell you what order the boot managers are in > and which one is the default. After the setup, the menu will wait > forever, displaying the menu and only give you the active boot > options . It will also beep when it is ready > for a response. You can also use the efibootmgr to determine what > menu option to use for the default OS option. > > *From:*Ubuntu-accessibility > *On Behalf Of > *faginbagin > *Sent:* Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM > *To:* ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com > *Subject:* Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a > Dual boot Scenario? > > On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: > > On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: > > Hi all, > > On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 > alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots > into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably > boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the > Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with > pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow > twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 > or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m > guessing there are a number of entries I could care less > about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added > as time passes. > > What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds > like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. > I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m > having issues installing that in 23.04. > > Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with > the old Grub. Ah well. > > Thanks, > > --Al > > Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other > words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, > the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch > might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from > a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but > /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I > hope it helps. > > Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen > and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want > those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next > default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add > GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out > GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details > see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: > https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration > > HTH > > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From alpuzz at gmail.com Mon Jun 12 17:38:30 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2023 13:38:30 -0400 Subject: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? In-Reply-To: <4f618d63-eeaf-7592-25e3-29a983879474@gmail.com> References: <18c5b01d99c7d$7c227ba0$746772e0$@gmail.com> <00ac1834-46a8-b2d9-1e04-e012ae0b93bc@gmail.com> <5d54729e-24f2-1572-58c9-033daad54154@gmail.com> <003a01d99c84$e45a4e80$ad0eeb80$@gmail.com> <18cb301d99cab$0614afe0$123e0fa0$@gmail.com> <9d05d3ea-8bed-18d5-35dd-87e703156934@thefudge.net> <18cc801d99cc4$fe14f650$fa3ee2f0$@gmail.com> <4f618d63-eeaf-7592-25e3-29a983879474@gmail.com> Message-ID: <001e01d99d54$b4110bd0$1c332370$@gmail.com> Awesome. Very helpful. Thanks! From: Ubuntu-accessibility On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Monday, June 12, 2023 11:57 AM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Glad you found a solution that works for you. If you need or want to change things, one thing I wanted to mention, it doesn't look like you need to tinker with efibootmgr to control the boot process. At least not as long as you don't install another OS and are OK using grub2. The output you got from efibootmgr shows that grub2 is the default boot loader that the UEFI boot manager will load, because ubuntu IS grub2. ubuntu, in this case, is just a label for a folder in the EFI partition which contains the grub2 boot loader. How do I know know UEFI boot manager will, by default, hand over control to grub2? Because: BootCurrent = 0001 BootOrder lists 0001 first. Boot0001 points to ubuntu Although it's not shown in your output, ubuntu points to a file in the folder, EFI/ubuntu. You could see that if you ran efibootmgr in verbose mode: efibootmgr -v When you are running the Ubuntu OS, the EFI/ubuntu folder is /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu. You need root permission to examine it. If you execute: sudo ls -l /boot/efi/EFI/ubuntu, you should see something like what I see: total 4314 -rwx------ 1 root root 108 May 3 10:47 BOOTX64.CSV -rwx------ 1 root root 126 May 3 10:47 grub.cfg -rwx------ 1 root root 2594696 May 3 10:47 grubx64.efi -rwx------ 1 root root 860824 May 3 10:47 mmx64.efi -rwx------ 1 root root 960472 May 3 10:47 shimx64.efi Hope that's not too much information, or too little! On 6/11/2023 8:29 PM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Thanks to everyone for the help! End and then up arrow once does the trick! That’s good enough for me for now. I’ll play around with figuring out why I can’t set the boot defaults later. --Al From: Rob Whyte Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 6:29 PM To: Al Puzzuoli ; sonfire11 at gmail.com ; ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Push end to go to bottom of list and up arrow once. That is how I reliably do it. I depends on age of system of course. Might be worthwhile trying from the bottom though instead of arrowing down through a growing list of options. cheers On 12/6/23 07:23, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Thanks! I understand this in principle now; but either something is odd or more likely, I’m still just confused. When I run efibootmgr, I get the following: BootCurrent: 0001 Timeout: 1 seconds BootOrder: 0001,0000,0004,0005,0002,0003 Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager Boot0001* ubuntu Boot0002* Generic Usb Device Boot0003* CD/DVD Device Boot0004* UEFI: PXE IPv4 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM Boot0005* UEFI: PXE IPv6 Intel(R) Ethernet Connection (17) I219-LM So: Since Boot0000* Windows Boot Manager is the first item in the list, I should be able to make the machine boot to Windows by setting GRUB_DEFAULT=0, and then running update-grub, right? Only problem is GRUB_DEFAULT is already set to 0, and with this setting, the machine boots to Linux. Therefore, I tried grub_default=1, but the machine still boots to Linux. I also tried grub_default=saved, and then playing with the grub-set-default command. Whether I set it to 0 or 1, I still end up in Linux. Playing with the grub-reboot command yields similar results. No matter what values I use for any of these commands, I either end up booting to Linux, or to a place where I don’t have a screen reader and can’t figure out what’s going on. If I didn’t know any better, I would almost think that I am actually booting to the Windows Boot manager, but the Windows boot manager is defaulting to load Ubuntu. Is that even possible? I can’t imagine the Ubuntu 23.04 installer would have modified the Windows boot manager as well as installing Grub? At this point, I may have to connect a monitor and resort to sighted assistance. Very bizarre indeed. Thanks again, --Al From: Ubuntu-accessibility On Behalf Of sonfire11 at gmail.com Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:51 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: RE: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? Hi, I can directly edit the grub config file. In my setup, I turned on the beep, set timeout to -1 which will wait for a response forever, and also set the menu to visible instead of hidden. Also disable all of the extra recovery options. When you are in a terminal window, type sudo efibootmgr and provide your sudo password. This will tell you what order the boot managers are in and which one is the default. After the setup, the menu will wait forever, displaying the menu and only give you the active boot options . It will also beep when it is ready for a response. You can also use the efibootmgr to determine what menu option to use for the default OS option. From: Ubuntu-accessibility > On Behalf Of faginbagin Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2023 12:27 PM To: ubuntu-accessibility at lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: Tips for accessibly Managing/Navigating Grub2 in a Dual boot Scenario? On 6/11/2023 12:17 PM, faginbagin wrote: On 6/11/2023 11:57 AM, Al Puzzuoli wrote: Hi all, On one of my machines, I have installed Ubuntu 23.04 alongside Windows 11. By default now, the machine boots into Linux. My issue is that I’m not sure how to reliably boot to Windows when I want to do so. I’ve enabled the Grub beep, and after the beep, I’ve experimented with pressing down arrow and then enter, pressing down arrow twice, and then enter, etc. Maybe I need to down arrow 3 or 4 times, but the upshot is I’m just not sure. I’m guessing there are a number of entries I could care less about such as Memtest 386 and older kernels will get added as time passes. What’s the best way to deal with this these days? Sounds like you’re no longer supposed to edit grub.conf directly. I’ve seen talk about the grub-customizer tool but I’m having issues installing that in 23.04. Seems like this used to be easier 15 or 20 years ago with the old Grub. Ah well. Thanks, --Al Would it help if grub saved your last boot option? In other words, if you do boot into Windows, the next time you reboot, the default choice will be windows? If so, the attached patch might help (if the list allows text format patches). It's from a 22.04 system (I don't have 23.04 installed), but /etc/default/grub has not seen a lot of changes over time. I hope it helps. Forgot to mention that this patch also disables the splash screen and makes sure there's a 10 second timeout. If you don't want those changes, but do want to save your last boot as the next default boot option. you only need to change GRUB_DEFAULT and add GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT as shown in the patch. I did comment out GRUB_TIMEOUT_STYLE but I'm not sure it is needed. For more details see the grub documentation, especially section 6.1: https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub/grub.html#Simple-configuration HTH -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From alpuzz at gmail.com Wed Jun 14 23:04:05 2023 From: alpuzz at gmail.com (Al Puzzuoli) Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2023 19:04:05 -0400 Subject: Does anyone have a copy of the Ubuntu 22.10 installer where Windows + Super +S actually works? Message-ID: <002201d99f14$8523f9b0$8f6bed10$@gmail.com> Hi all, Does anyone have a copy of the Ubuntu 22.10 installer where the screen reader can be activated and the setup actually works? I've been trying to configure my workstation for about a week now and am running into some major frustrations with the Ubuntu installers. The only installer that has worked flawlessly is the one for Ubuntu mate 23.04. That's great, but I'm trying to do some work with the Nvidia Container Toolkit and 23.04 isn't supported yet. So now I'm trying to install 22.10. The Ubuntu 22.10 Desktop installer doesn't let me activate the screen reader. The Ubuntu Mate 22.10 installer does let me activate the screen reader; However for some weird reason, that installer locks up immediately after I connect to my wi-fi network. At this point, any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, --Al -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: