Grub cannot find ntfs.mod












0















I am not able to boot into my Windows partition.
When startig grub and entering windows it just shows the text on the Grub Windows Boot picture.



grub.d/40_custom:



menuentry 'Windows 10' --class windows --class os{
insmod ntfs
insmod chain
set root='(hd0,1)'
chainloader /EFI/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgfw.efi
}


Grub Windows Boot










share|improve this question

























  • copy the text and paste here, not in images

    – phuclv
    Mar 1 at 14:16











  • post output of locate ntfs.mod

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 14:47













  • @Cestarian /boot/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod /boot/grub.bak/x86_64-efi/ntfs.mod /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 15:36













  • Hmm it's clearly there... I assume you're using x86_64-efi grub. I haven't dual-booted for years though, never with Windows 10, so I'm not sure how to solve this though I have some theories... maybe try running grub-mkconfig again? In the meantime, I think you should be able to boot into windows from your UEFI bios, to circumvent the bootloader altogether.

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 15:50











  • @Cestarian I am able to boot into windows, should I send you the mkconfig?

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 16:55
















0















I am not able to boot into my Windows partition.
When startig grub and entering windows it just shows the text on the Grub Windows Boot picture.



grub.d/40_custom:



menuentry 'Windows 10' --class windows --class os{
insmod ntfs
insmod chain
set root='(hd0,1)'
chainloader /EFI/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgfw.efi
}


Grub Windows Boot










share|improve this question

























  • copy the text and paste here, not in images

    – phuclv
    Mar 1 at 14:16











  • post output of locate ntfs.mod

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 14:47













  • @Cestarian /boot/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod /boot/grub.bak/x86_64-efi/ntfs.mod /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 15:36













  • Hmm it's clearly there... I assume you're using x86_64-efi grub. I haven't dual-booted for years though, never with Windows 10, so I'm not sure how to solve this though I have some theories... maybe try running grub-mkconfig again? In the meantime, I think you should be able to boot into windows from your UEFI bios, to circumvent the bootloader altogether.

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 15:50











  • @Cestarian I am able to boot into windows, should I send you the mkconfig?

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 16:55














0












0








0








I am not able to boot into my Windows partition.
When startig grub and entering windows it just shows the text on the Grub Windows Boot picture.



grub.d/40_custom:



menuentry 'Windows 10' --class windows --class os{
insmod ntfs
insmod chain
set root='(hd0,1)'
chainloader /EFI/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgfw.efi
}


Grub Windows Boot










share|improve this question
















I am not able to boot into my Windows partition.
When startig grub and entering windows it just shows the text on the Grub Windows Boot picture.



grub.d/40_custom:



menuentry 'Windows 10' --class windows --class os{
insmod ntfs
insmod chain
set root='(hd0,1)'
chainloader /EFI/Microsoft/Boot/bootmgfw.efi
}


Grub Windows Boot







linux windows grub ntfs






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 1 at 14:41







ph1l1pp

















asked Mar 1 at 12:42









ph1l1ppph1l1pp

11




11













  • copy the text and paste here, not in images

    – phuclv
    Mar 1 at 14:16











  • post output of locate ntfs.mod

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 14:47













  • @Cestarian /boot/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod /boot/grub.bak/x86_64-efi/ntfs.mod /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 15:36













  • Hmm it's clearly there... I assume you're using x86_64-efi grub. I haven't dual-booted for years though, never with Windows 10, so I'm not sure how to solve this though I have some theories... maybe try running grub-mkconfig again? In the meantime, I think you should be able to boot into windows from your UEFI bios, to circumvent the bootloader altogether.

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 15:50











  • @Cestarian I am able to boot into windows, should I send you the mkconfig?

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 16:55



















  • copy the text and paste here, not in images

    – phuclv
    Mar 1 at 14:16











  • post output of locate ntfs.mod

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 14:47













  • @Cestarian /boot/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod /boot/grub.bak/x86_64-efi/ntfs.mod /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 15:36













  • Hmm it's clearly there... I assume you're using x86_64-efi grub. I haven't dual-booted for years though, never with Windows 10, so I'm not sure how to solve this though I have some theories... maybe try running grub-mkconfig again? In the meantime, I think you should be able to boot into windows from your UEFI bios, to circumvent the bootloader altogether.

    – Cestarian
    Mar 1 at 15:50











  • @Cestarian I am able to boot into windows, should I send you the mkconfig?

    – ph1l1pp
    Mar 1 at 16:55

















copy the text and paste here, not in images

– phuclv
Mar 1 at 14:16





copy the text and paste here, not in images

– phuclv
Mar 1 at 14:16













post output of locate ntfs.mod

– Cestarian
Mar 1 at 14:47







post output of locate ntfs.mod

– Cestarian
Mar 1 at 14:47















@Cestarian /boot/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod /boot/grub.bak/x86_64-efi/ntfs.mod /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod

– ph1l1pp
Mar 1 at 15:36







@Cestarian /boot/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod /boot/grub.bak/x86_64-efi/ntfs.mod /usr/lib/grub/i386-pc/ntfs.mod

– ph1l1pp
Mar 1 at 15:36















Hmm it's clearly there... I assume you're using x86_64-efi grub. I haven't dual-booted for years though, never with Windows 10, so I'm not sure how to solve this though I have some theories... maybe try running grub-mkconfig again? In the meantime, I think you should be able to boot into windows from your UEFI bios, to circumvent the bootloader altogether.

– Cestarian
Mar 1 at 15:50





Hmm it's clearly there... I assume you're using x86_64-efi grub. I haven't dual-booted for years though, never with Windows 10, so I'm not sure how to solve this though I have some theories... maybe try running grub-mkconfig again? In the meantime, I think you should be able to boot into windows from your UEFI bios, to circumvent the bootloader altogether.

– Cestarian
Mar 1 at 15:50













@Cestarian I am able to boot into windows, should I send you the mkconfig?

– ph1l1pp
Mar 1 at 16:55





@Cestarian I am able to boot into windows, should I send you the mkconfig?

– ph1l1pp
Mar 1 at 16:55










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