Falcon1986 Posted January 5, 2010 Report Share Posted January 5, 2010 (edited) [Original question edited out.]After installing Ubuntu 9.10 the desktop rebooted, but always loads Memtest. I cannot even boot into Windows XP, which is installed on the same disk as Ubuntu, just on a different partition.How do I fix this? I have tried using my Windows XP CD's Recovery Console to do fixmbr and fixboot to no avail. I do not mind losing Ubuntu, but I do not want to have to lose XP.Thanks in advance for your help. Edited January 5, 2010 by Falcon1986 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
iccaros Posted January 5, 2010 Report Share Posted January 5, 2010 do you have more than one disk? what is the drive layoutAll boot loaders are loaded in the same place or else bios could not find them. the fix mbr should have made it boot only windows.. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Falcon1986 Posted January 5, 2010 Author Report Share Posted January 5, 2010 Thanks for the reply, 'iccaros'. I got it sorted out. Wow, am I relieved!Yes, I have 3 physical disks on the desktop. I was attempting to install Ubuntu 9.10 via UNetBootin on the same disk as Windows XP, such that Windows occupied 120GB and Ubuntu occupied the remaining 40GB. At the 'Advanced Options' screen just before finalizing the installation, I saw that I could change the installation location of the bootloader, but I left it at /dev/sda. In retrospect, I should have probably changed that to the Ubuntu /boot partition because I remember doing so on my Vista laptop so as to avoid tampering with the Vista bootloader. On that occasion I just used EasyBCD from within Windows to point the Vista menu entry to the relevant Linux boot partition. Unfortunately, I can't get EasyBCD to run in XP; perhaps an older version will.Anyway, after no success with the Windows Recovery Console, I booted UBCD > Seagate DiskWizard and used 'Update MBR' to fix the Seagate disk. And it worked! Rebooting took me into Windows XP! This was quite a learning experience. I was looking into the Super Grub Disk tool, but that seemed a little too complicated for me, still being new to Linux. Also discovered that one of my disks needs error-checking thanks to a background disk utility found in Ubuntu 9.10. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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