Bret Busby wrote: > The Debian 7.60 LXDE LiveCD does not have an option to boot into rescue mode.
You could always download the standard debian-installer and use that to boot rescue mode. It is a very good option. However if you have a livecd and you say you do then that should be enough to do what you need. Simply chroot into your system and then use it to repair your bootloader. The basic process goes like this. * Boot a livecd image. * Mount the target system to repair. mkdir /target mount /dev/sda5 /target mount /dev/sda1 /target/boot chroot /target /bin/bash grub-install /dev/sda exit shutdown -r now You will need to adapt it to your system environment. Your device paths will be uniquely yours. This is just an example of the overall process to give you the idea of the flow. The chroot stacks a shell logged into the target environment. Once inside that environment then you have access to the system commands to repair grub. You can apt-get install additional software. You can fix things. Bob
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