Download the Windows 10 installation from Microsoft and write it
to a DoK. It should have a recovery option for restoring the UEFI
BIOS.
Shachar
On 29/04/2020 12:10, Gabor Szabo wrote:
Thanks for the quick reply, at least I don't feel
totally alone in this!
Some SATA/NVME devices have dual modes, settable
in the BIOS. They might, e.g., have a RAID mode
etc. Some of those modes are not supported by
Linux. Resetting that in the BIOS should make at
least your bootable DoK see the disk again.
I saw that in the BIOS, I'll try that.
I changed the disk from RAID to AHCI in the BIOS and booted
from USB and now lsblk shows the harddisk.
sda 8:0 1 14.3G 0 disk /cdrom
sda1 8:1 1 1.9G 0 part
sda2 8:2 1 2.4M 0 part
nvme0n1 259:0 0 477G 0 disk
nvme0n1p1 259:1 0 499M 0 part
nvme0n1p2 259:2 0 100M 0 part
nvme0n1p3 259:3 0 16M 0 part
nvme0n1p4 259:4 0 332.2G 0 part
nvme0n1p5 259:5 0 572M 0 part
based on this and after consulting my notes I can see that
apparently I did not install Linux here, only allocated disk
space in case I will want to install it as well.
I can also see that this was done in December 2018, not
that it matters a lot now.
So now at least I can access the hard disk. That's a
relief.
Gabor
_______________________________________________
Linux-il mailing list
Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il
http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il
|
_______________________________________________
Linux-il mailing list
Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il
http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il