The grub command line shell affords you the opportunity to find out what has happened. But you need to take the time to learn how to use it. I think it would be well worth your time for you and for us. Then we know what happened.
You are booting to grub. Q1: Is this in a secure boot environment for from a "legacy" configuration? Q2: What did Windows do? Changed the name and UUID of a partition? Format your Linux partition? What has happened. I have gone to not doing dual boot with Windows simply because they do not wish to play well with other OS. Would a good solution be to learn how to dual boot from Windows using their boot loader redirection? Have a lot of fun! Tod On Sun, Nov 20, 2016 at 1:15 PM, peterlesterh...@telfort.nl < peterlesterh...@telfort.nl> wrote: > Hi, > After a Windows update my (dual boot) system won't boot into fedora > anymore. > Somehow the grub bootloader doesn' t start. > > After booting this is what I see: > > > > *Minimal Bash-like line editing is supported. For the first word TAB lists > possible command completions. Anywhere else TAB lists possible device or > file completions.grub>_* > > When I issue the command "exit" the Windows bootloader pops up. > > I googled on this subject, but found many completely different answers. > I would appreciate any suggestion. How can I recover my system? > > > _______________________________________________ > users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org > To unsubscribe send an email to users-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org > >
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