It could be your entries in fstab. If they refer to the UUID of a partition, 
and that UUID has changed, but fstab is now out of date, it would need updating 
with the correct UUID.

You can find these out by using gparted, perhaps run from a live DVD.


David King


On 06/08/16 00:07, Henry W. Peters wrote:

I upgraded to Ubuntu Studio 16.04 this afternoon (I was using v. 13. something) 
all seemed to go well until I tried to restart. After clicking Ubuntu Low 
Latency, in Grub, I got the terminal window that said:
:[sdd] No caching mode found
:[sdd] Assuming drive cache write through.
I have an HP 8600 desktop... I'm doing dual boot with Windows 10, with my Linux 
install on an external drive. I have rEfind on a flash drive that I use to 
switch OS's (unless there is a fresh update of grub, in which case, I go right 
to Grub).
When it came up, during the upgrade, I kept my present preferences, but I did 
have the upgrade remove what it claimed to be obsolete files...
I can still startup & use Windows.
Any suggestions or help*much*  appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Henry
"Earth is spinning, round the sun..."



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