My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?











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I am trying to boot Ubuntu on my computer. When I boot Ubuntu, it boots to a black screen. How can I fix this?



Table of Contents:




  1. If you are trying to install Ubuntu


  2. If you have a dual boot system

  3. If an update or something else caused your problem










share|improve this question




























    up vote
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    I am trying to boot Ubuntu on my computer. When I boot Ubuntu, it boots to a black screen. How can I fix this?



    Table of Contents:




    1. If you are trying to install Ubuntu


    2. If you have a dual boot system

    3. If an update or something else caused your problem










    share|improve this question


























      up vote
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      down vote

      favorite
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      up vote
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      down vote

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      286





      I am trying to boot Ubuntu on my computer. When I boot Ubuntu, it boots to a black screen. How can I fix this?



      Table of Contents:




      1. If you are trying to install Ubuntu


      2. If you have a dual boot system

      3. If an update or something else caused your problem










      share|improve this question















      I am trying to boot Ubuntu on my computer. When I boot Ubuntu, it boots to a black screen. How can I fix this?



      Table of Contents:




      1. If you are trying to install Ubuntu


      2. If you have a dual boot system

      3. If an update or something else caused your problem







      boot






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:23


























      community wiki





      13 revs, 7 users 56%
      Jorge Castro























          32 Answers
          32






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          up vote
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          +100










          If you are trying to install Ubuntu



          1. Ensuring your CD/DVD or USB flash drive burned/written correctly and not damaged:





          • How to MD5 test Ubuntu ISOs. See also: Where to find the checksums of Ubuntu ISO images? or MD5 hash for ubuntu .iso (14.04 through 17.04)

          • Check out these steps to see how to check your CD once you boot into it to make sure it's ready to go.


          • Verify the integrity of the burned CD/DVD or written USB flash drive (this also checks that it's accessible by the computer on which you wish to install).


          2. Black/purple screen when you try to boot the LiveCD



          The Ubuntu installer's startup portion is sometimes incompatible with certain graphics cards. Fixing it and getting to the Ubuntu Desktop to try or install it can often be surprisingly easy fix: the nomodeset parameter. To see if it works for you:





          • Boot from the Desktop Live CD and press the key when you see the below:



            screen shot 1




          • Press Enter and select English:



            screen shot 2




          • Press F6, use the keys to go down to nomodeset, and press Enter. An x will appear to its left. Then press Esc, and press Enter to "Try Ubuntu without installing."



            screen shot 3




          You can also try acpi = off and nolapic if nomodset also shows up as a black screen.



          3. Black screen



          or



          "you need to load kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0" errors



          when installing to an UEFI capable machine:



          Ubuntu's installer 'when attempting to run in UEFI mode) will hang and stop due to different manufacturer's implementations of the UEFI specification and will hang in different ways.
          To identify if your machine is booting in installer UEFI mode you will see



          screen shot 4



          REF: UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation Section 2.4



          If your machine is CSM capable (which is a full UEFI implementation with an emulated BIOS layer) after selecting any option from the grub list the system will hang at a black screen.



          The picture above actually only confirms your DVD/USB booted using UEFI and there will be some means in firmware settings to ensure drives are booted in order to make the UEFI installer run (a solution may possibly be as simple as ensuring SATA is set to AHCI) - check your vendors manual! Also check the UEFI Community Documentation Section 2.3 for more details.



          What you need to do first is to disable SECURE BOOT in the firmware settings.
          If that does not get the Ubuntu installer running, try disabling anything mentioning UEFI in the firmware settings.
          Or

          If you cannot find UEFI settings then enable CSM - this will disable the UEFI booting of the installer and then allow a legacy/BIOS install of Ubuntu.

          Installing grub-efi afterwards will allow UEFI to be re-enabled. Again refer to UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4



          Some machines use a full BIOS with an emulated UEFI layer which may throw errors as described ie "you need to load the kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0"



          Not all of these machines implement Secure Boot. Simply selecting UEFI in the BIOS settings will configure UEFI mode on hard drives. There is no solution for these errors and the workaround is to disable UEFI to enable the Ubuntu installer to run in legacy mode; after which boot-repair can be used to install grub-efi which then allows/needs UEFI switched back on before Ubuntu will boot using UEFI. Once again refer to the UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4





          Black/purple screen after you boot Ubuntu for the first time



          This usually happens because you have an Nvidia or AMD graphics card, or a laptop with Optimus or switchable/hybrid graphics, and Ubuntu does not have the proprietary drivers installed to allow it to work with these.



          The solution is to boot Ubuntu once in nomodeset mode (your screen may look weird) to bypass the black screen, download and install the drivers, and then reboot to fix it for ever.





          • Start your computer, and press the Right Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (usually the first one).



            screen shot 5




          • Press e to edit that entry, which will show you the details:



            screen shot 6




          • Find the linux entry as shown above, use the keys to get to it, and then press the End key to get to that line's end (which may be on the next line!).



            screen shot 7




            • Enter nomodeset as shown, and press Ctrl+X to boot to where you can successfully install your graphics drivers.




          If you are running Ubuntu 12.04 or 12.10, and have a ATI/AMD graphics card, you have to follow the instructions here, otherwise you will run into this problem every time you restart your computer.



          LUKS encryption



          In case you've installed Ubuntu with LUKS encryption / LVM option, it could be that Ubuntu just asks you for your password - and you cannot see it.
          If you have a black screen, try pressing Alt+ and then Alt+ to switch your tty, this may bring back the password query and turn backlight back on.



          If you have a purple screen (maybe you need to set the nomodeset-option also?) and you have encrypted your complete Ubuntu installation, try to just type your encryption/LUKS-password after waiting some seconds (or minutes, just to be sure) and continue with a press on Enter. If this is successfull, you should see your Login-screen just a few seconds later.






          1. Try the Alternate Installer - this is a text based installer that might work better than the liveCD depending on your hardware.
            If you do this, you may get a black screen before you even hit grub. A simple Ctrl+Alt+Del gets some users to a usable grub screen


          2. If you have an Nvidia Optimus card you should NOT install nvidia drivers, just use the built in driver, see here:




            • Is a NVIDIA GeForce with Optimus Technology supported by Ubuntu?



          3. After selecting boot options you have the opportunity to edit the boot flags manually using your keyboard. Replace quiet splash with no splash to get an idea of what step your system is failing at. Using that information search the forums or the internet for answers from the community.


          4. If you still can't install Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into a hardware specific bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?







          share|improve this answer



















          • 10




            Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
            – n00b
            Feb 12 '13 at 2:49






          • 7




            +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
            – eduncan911
            Jan 13 '14 at 22:04






          • 6




            I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
            – Alan B
            May 1 '14 at 8:23








          • 2




            What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
            – Hendra Anggrian
            Nov 18 '16 at 14:01








          • 1




            For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
            – M.A.K. Ripon
            Dec 11 '17 at 4:08


















          up vote
          74
          down vote













          If an update or something else caused your boot problem:





          1. Freezes:




            • Freeze troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki

            • Blank Screen troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki




          2. nVidia Users:




            • Blank screen after installing nvidia restricted driver

            • Graphics issues after/while installing Ubuntu 16.04/16.10 with NVIDIA graphics




          3. ATI/AMD Users:




            • Fglrx causes serious bug-black screen!




          4. Grub recovery cross links




            • How to enable boot messages to be printed on screen during boot up?

            • How do I investigate boot and partition issues?




          5. Reinstalling your machine




            • I can't boot into a usable system after updates. What should I do?




          6. Sometimes a kernel upgrade can cause problems, especially if you're using closed drivers, you can confirm if this is the case by booting into your old kernel.





            • How can I boot with an older kernel version?
              If your old kernel works then you've found a bug in the new kernel, see the end of this post to report it to the kernel team!

            • Debugging the Kernel Boot at the Ubuntu Wiki



          7. LiveCD recovery crosslinks


          8. and so on ...

          9. If you still can't boot Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into some other kind of bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?






          share|improve this answer























          • What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
            – mc.dev
            Jun 13 at 4:02


















          up vote
          63
          down vote













          If your system is dual boot:



          Link up the following:





          • Boot sector repair



            Boot-Repair




          • grub stuff



            Installing and Re-installing GRUB




          • If you'd like to totally remove Ubuntu and want to install Windows:



            How to Remove Ubuntu and Put Windows Back On








          share|improve this answer






























            up vote
            60
            down vote













            If your graphics card is Nvidia, follow these steps:




            1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press e; then,

            2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with no splash or nomodeset.

            3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.


            If your graphics card is ATI, follow these steps:




            1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press "e"; then

            2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with radeon.modeset=0.

            3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.






            share|improve this answer























            • Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
              – Piku
              Mar 28 '16 at 10:14










            • OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
              – user1767754
              Dec 5 '17 at 8:15


















            up vote
            41
            down vote













            Increase screen brightness



            On certain laptops (like HP Pavilion), you may boot to a black screen due to low screen brightness.



            Increase the brightness using key combination (this differs for every model. For example, FN+F7)






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
              – Mukesh Chapagain
              May 10 '13 at 2:37






            • 3




              Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
              – sparebytes
              Sep 5 '13 at 0:51










            • Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
              – capdragon
              Apr 4 '14 at 2:21










            • It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
              – 0xc0de
              Jun 17 '16 at 9:48


















            up vote
            33
            down vote













            It appears as we both share the same hardware. At least the same CPU, The same P67 and the same video card (Mine is a GT 440). What you can do is the following:




            1. When booting press the ESC Key or leave the SHIFT key pressed until the GRUB menu appears.



            2. In the GRUB menu select the RECOVERY MODE. It should say something like:



              Ubuntu, with Linux 3.2.0-25-generic-pae (recovery mode)




            3. After the recovery mode finishes loading, it should present you with a menu. Select the option about going to the shell with root access (root Option. Last option in the image below)



              enter image description here




            4. Now we need to install the Nvidia drivers and update the system. Follow the next lines step by step to do this in the correct order. Also make sure you are connected to the Internet:



              A. Updating System





              1. sudo apt-get update

              2. sudo apt-get upgrade


              B. Nvidia Drivers



              There are 2 ways to install the Proprietary Drivers. the PPA Way or the Default Ubuntu way.




              1. The Default Ubuntu Way involves just typing in the terminal sudo apt-get install nvidia-current (For the current normal drivers) or sudo apt-get install nvidia-current-updates (For the latest current drivers). Just pick one.



              2. the PPA way has the Latest bleeding bloody edge drivers. I mention this one since I am testing it in some use cases that relate to problems using TVs and 16:9/16:10 resolutions. To install this one do this:



                sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa and press ENTER to accept a message you will receive. Then do sudo apt-get update. Lastly do sudo apt-get install nvidia-375. Note that you can not mix this one with the Ubuntu way. One will overwrite the other one.





            5. Reboot sudo reboot



            Now if you happen to have any problems do the following via the terminal again but this time go to your home folder. In my case it is /home/cyrex, so I would cd /home/cyrex. In your case you should change that to your user and the apply the following:



            sudo rm -fr ./config/monitors.xml
            sudo rm -fr .nv*
            sudo rm -fr /etc/X11/xorg.conf


            Then when you boot into Ubuntu change the resolution via the Displays option in the Ubuntu Settings Menu (The cog in the upper right corner)



            What we did there was remove the monitors.xml to solve some resolution problems, remove the .nvidia-settings to fix some Nvidia config problems and remove the xorg.conf (Which is not really needed in the latest Ubuntu versions) to remove any badly configured options.



            Lastly we can execute the grub option in the recovery menu to fix any bootloader issues.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
              – kelvinilla
              Jul 31 '14 at 17:37










            • Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
              – AlvaroAV
              Dec 5 '14 at 13:51










            • @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
              – Luis Alvarado
              Dec 5 '14 at 15:49






            • 1




              @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
              – AlvaroAV
              Dec 5 '14 at 15:51










            • Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
              – Saurabh Singh
              Aug 4 at 17:05




















            up vote
            30
            down vote













            I had this problem last night. All of a sudden my system wouldn't boot up anymore. BIOS check would finish, then it would just hang there on a black screen with the cursor flashing. Left it there for several hours just in case. When that didn't work, I unplugged all my USB devices and all of a sudden it booted up fine again. I haven't narrowed it down exactly, but in my case it was either my USB hub or the iPod plugged into that USB hub that was causing it to hang.



            Not saying this is necessarily the problem you're having, but hope your boot problem is as easy to fix as unplugging some USB devices...!






            share|improve this answer





















            • I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
              – emf
              Oct 13 '10 at 6:21










            • The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
              – Doughy
              Oct 13 '10 at 15:49










            • I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
              – JMCF125
              Feb 12 '14 at 11:07










            • This solution worked for me.
              – Omar Tariq
              Jan 23 at 18:42


















            up vote
            24
            down vote













            If you are using the Windows Installer (Wubi)



            Wubi overrides are identical to normal installs except the first time you reboot after running the installer in Windows.



            To complicate things, since Ubuntu 11.10 there are two distinct methods to install with Wubi. The first way is using the Desktop ISO, which applies to all sub-flavours (Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Mythbuntu etc.) and also if you downloaded the Ubuntu ISO yourself.



            The second method is using a pre-installed disk-image, if you run wubi.exe standalone and choose to install Ubuntu.



            Method 1



            You'll see this:



            Completing the Ubuntu installation
            For more installation options, press ESC now 5...4...3...2...1


            Press Esc and then you see this:



            Normal mode
            Safe graphic mode
            ACPI workarounds
            Verbose mode
            Demo mode


            Ignore Safe graphic mode as it applied to Ubuntu in 2008 and does nothing for the modern nvidia/radeon issue. Place your cursor on Normal mode and press E. Then edit the entry and insert nomodeset as shown here (look for it between noprompt and quiet splash in the middle; note there may be some other differences but don't change anything else - just add nomodeset):



            linux /ubuntu/install/boot/vmlinuz debian-installer/custom-installation=/ubuntu/install/custom-installation 
            iso-scan/filename=/ubuntu/install/installation.iso
            automatic-ubiquity noprompt nomodeset quiet splash boot=casper ro debian-installer/locale=en_US.UTF-8
            console-setup/layoutcode=us console-setup/variantcode= -- rootflags-syncio
            initrd /ubuntu/install/boot/initrd.lz


            Now press Ctrl+X to boot.



            NOTE: This only applies to the Installation; the next time you boot you have to override it again, and for this it will be the same as for a normal install (answered above). Make sure you hold Shift to make the Grub menu show though.



            Method 2
            When you run wubi.exe standalone and install Ubuntu (not a sub-flavour), it downloads a pre-installed, compressed disk image with a default Ubuntu install, and then decompresses this to the size of the virtual disk. There is no grub.cfg setup yet so it uses the file ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg for the first boot which you can edit and add nomodeset:



            loopback loop0 /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
            set root=(loop0)
            search --set=diskroot -f -n /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
            probe --set=diskuuid -u $diskroot
            linux /vmlinuz root=UUID=$diskuuid loop=/ubuntu/disks/root.disk preseed/file=/ubuntu/install/preseed.cfg wubi-diskimage ro quiet splash nomodeset
            initrd /initrd.img
            boot


            Note - if you've come to this thread after booting for the first time, it's possible that the grub.cfg has already been created (even if it froze up). In this case, editing the ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg file will do nothing - it always checks for /boot/grub/grub.cfg inside the virtual disk first. So you should follow the instructions for the normal install above.



            Note also that the Grub Menu is suppressed by default on Wubi installs (even though there are two operating systems - because you boot Ubuntu from Windows, and therefore adding a Windows entry from Ubuntu's Grub Menu makes no sense) so you have to press and hold the Shift key after selecting Ubuntu in order to display the Grub Menu. On Windows 8, it reboots after you elect to boot into Wubi, in which case, you should hold the Shift key after the BIOS posts.
            (This is only for Windows 8 with BIOS - Wubi doesn't work with UEFI).






            share|improve this answer






























              up vote
              16
              down vote













              I also had this problem, or a similar one. It turned out that, for some reason, Ubuntu had started with the screen brightness on its lowest setting. If I went into a very dark room, I could see the screen just well enough to go to the "Brightness and Lock" control panel and turn the brightness up to where it should be.






              share|improve this answer




























                up vote
                15
                down vote













                how to fix :




                1. Start ubuntu, login, now in the blackscreen go to the console Ctrl+Alt+F1
                  and type nautilus


                2. if nautilus cannot be opened in terminal type unity


                3. now without exiting or stoping the unity comand return to the ubuntu interface in my pc is Ctrl+Alt+F7

                4. open terminal in nautilus using Ctrl+Alt+T and type nautilus

                5. while nautilus still open, in terminal type sudo software-properties-gtk

                6. search for graphic drivers, my problem was the default drivers of X.org. I have an ati video card and I installed the drivers of fglrx-updates if you have nvidia install the drivers of nvidia or if you have ati driver

                7. reboot

                8. after login u will see nautilus running well and the wallpaper the only thing not working is unity. open terminal and type: dconf reset -f /org/compiz/ and setsid unity


                thats it.



                I hope this fix your problem.






                share|improve this answer























                • very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                  – dschinn1001
                  Jan 9 '16 at 5:25


















                up vote
                14
                down vote













                I realize this is an old question, but it's also pretty general without any details about the specific hardware involved. That said, you can't file a bug or go about fixing things until you figure out some more details.



                I thought I'd take a stab at this since I faced the issue and recovered from it pretty recently. I'll probably run through here again later and throw in some more info and simplify the steps, but the answer list is already pretty big, so I'll go easy on the screenshots.



                Recovery mode is your friend, but you don't always need a single-user root session to solve things. In fact, you might just be able to do a normal console login by selecting "resume" without considering any of the other options on the recovery menu. The nice thing about a normal console session over the single-user root mode is that you can get multiple terminals running at once--Switch between them or open up new ones with Alt+F1, Alt+F2, etc. There's a good chance that it's a video driver issue which is preventing you from going into the graphical login, and it might just be a result of some upgrade you did before rebooting the computer.



                You might go a couple of years at a time without experiencing similar issues, but it's a good idea to know your hardware and to be prepared to use the terminal. Basically there are two video drivers to worry about: the kernel driver and the xorg driver. Xorg is a video server that uses the x11 protocol to display things in full color with depth and all kinds of crazy effects--It's an abstraction layer between applications like the desktop environment or windowing managers and the kernel driver. The kernel driver is yet another abstraction layer, but it's a bit closer to communicating with the actual hardware.



                It's the kernel's job (in this case, Linux) to pass messages between applications and the hardware. The drivers can either be compiled into the kernel or added in a more ad hoc way through kernel modules. Probably you're using modules unless you configured and compiled your own custom kernel. The kernel driver as a module gets loaded shortly after you boot up, which allows for easier upgrades when you power down to swap out a card. The good news is that there are some more or less standard tools that you can run from the command line to give you more information about those kinds of drivers, the actual hardware and whether they're loading: lspci, dmidecode and dmesg, to name a few. There are man pages (e.g., $man dmidecode) and many howtos on those kinds of tools, so I won't go into too much detail here for now.



                Then there are the xorg drivers. To list what's available in the repositories, you might type apt-cache search xserver-xorg-video | less to give you a list of all possible drivers. Piping it to less with the '|' symbol which you can probably type by tapping the slash key while holding down shift (to be clear on what symbol this is), gives you the option to scroll back and forth through the list of drivers (with the arrow keys). To get more info on a specific driver, you might type apt-cache show xserver-xorg-video-vesa (to pick one at random). To install one, you could type apt-get install xserver-xorg-video-vesa and hope for the best. As of I don't know how many versions ago Xorg will try to load one of the installed drivers for you automatically, but under certain conditions you might have a configuration file lingering around in /etc/X11 called xorg.conf. So take a look and see if there's one there: ls /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                If you upgraded an Xorg driver without directly upgrading Xorg itself, there's a chance that reverting to the old driver via apt-get install will not automatically pull in the version of Xorg that it's compatible with--It should but apt doesn't always do what it should. Minimally, you'll need a matching version of xserver-xorg-core. Don't bother with uninstalling the upgraded xorg replacement though, just enter the command apt-get install xserver-xorg-core to revert back and uninstall the newer version automatically. This advice applies mostly to transitional renamed packages which provide virtual packages to replace ones that are still being maintained in the same branch of the package tree. Virtual packages are sometimes a mess and can do funny things with any of a number of dependencies which are getting swapped around in the upgrade/downgrade process, but concentrate on getting back to the GUI first.



                Now that I've given an overview of some directions to start with troubleshooting, let's get back to the console screen that you hopefully pulled off without a hitch from choosing "resume" at the recovery menu. It's a pain to be stuck without a mouse at the console when you've got a lot of copying and pasting to do, so prepare yourself with some gpm for mouse support and some other tools: links/links2 or w3m (web browsers), vim (text editor), dpkg, apt, less (vim style keys and searching like man), and grep. I'm probably leaving a few out.



                Some particularly useful commands for dpkg are dpkg -L to show files for packages that are already installed and dpkg -l | less to show all packages which are currently installed (piped to less).Sometimes gpm is a little finicky about letting you select things, so you can restart it with /etc/init.d/gpm restart but you might have problems with clicking on links in a page before you restart w3m or the browser links. w3m is a little easier to scroll around and generally better for authenticated sessions (e.g., logging into forums for help). It takes a bit of getting used to hitting the Esc key to click on links (the hyperlinks) though, and the learning curve is a bit steeper than with the browser known as links.



                Unless you've got an Nvidia card or something with proprietary driver support for linux that you want to try, I'd shy away from kernel drivers before trying things with xorg--Try troubleshooting the xorg drivers first because it can be a lot easier than customizing a kernel for hardware (depending on the brand). The thing is that you might wind up following a series of links that lead you in the wrong direction, with chip makers sending you to the card makers and card makers giving you no support. As for trying out different kernels for different "vanilla" versions of the driver, stick with kernel versions that aren't far off from your current one (given by uname -r) unless you're really interested in testing. There's a pretty good chance that the latest mainstream kernel won't even boot up on your system, so why bother if you're stuck with a half-way broken setup? Keep focused on doing the bare minimum that it takes to get back up again so you're not falling behind on too much work. You can type things up in emacs, vim or pico/nano or check your email in mutt or pine, but eventually you'll want to come back to the 21st century.



                Good luck!






                share|improve this answer






























                  up vote
                  13
                  down vote













                  If you have more than one video port on your graphics card (or more than one graphics card), then plugging the monitor into a different port may fix the problem.



                  I've had an issue in the past with dual-DVI graphic cards, where it won't boot using one of the ports (secondary maybe?), but works fine on the other port.






                  share|improve this answer



















                  • 2




                    I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                    – Rots
                    Jun 30 '14 at 10:24


















                  up vote
                  13
                  down vote













                  If Ubuntu 10.04 booted, but not 10.10 or newer versions booted



                  Chances are your computer's ACPI is not supported. Ubuntu 10.04 supported drivers for the ACPI, but dropped supported for that since 10.10.



                  To try that, change the BootOptions to nolapic and see if the Ubuntu Live CD boots (info).





                  If it worked, you have 2 options to make the LiveCD boot:





                  1. Disable the "New Card Interface" (which I saw the method in UbuntuForums)




                    • Go to BIOS > Security> I/O interface Security> "New interface card". Set it to Locked.


                    • Make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                  2. Or, disabling the ACPI, which is not recommended because it may disable some crucial features on you computer (like fans). This is not recommended unless you have tried the first option and you know what you are doing!



                    Instructions (source):




                    • Restart your computer.


                    • Press the key indicated during the startup messages (usually F2, Esc, or F1) to enter BIOS.


                    • Click on the "Power Settings" menu.


                    • Highlight the ACPI entry, press Enter, select "Disabled" and press Enter again.


                    • Press Esc and Y to exit and save.


                    • Again, make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                  Different PC manufacturers have different BIOSes, so read your computer's manual if your computer's BIOS doesn't show up.






                  share|improve this answer






























                    up vote
                    13
                    down vote













                    I had the same problem.



                    I just fixed it. (kind of)
                    My solution (so you can boot back into your GUI) (don't know if it really was this or if it where some thing together):




                    • open TTY (ctrl + alt + F1) to type the commands.


                    • make sure the radeon open-source drivers are installed.
                      https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonDriver


                    • delete all the fglrx drivers:

                      I first tried: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Troubleshooting/VideoDriverDetection#Problem:_Need_to_purge_-fglrx

                      and later tried this:
                      sudo apt-get remove fglrx*



                    after that I could reboot and login.



                    OPTIONAL: if you have login loop (type password and is accepted, it will re-ask for your password):
                    (make backup of the file)
                    mv ~/.Xauthority ~/.Xauthority.old
                    and retry to login.



                    any question, just ask.






                    share|improve this answer























                    • For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                      – Rafal
                      Aug 5 '14 at 20:29










                    • For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                      – Rotomano
                      Apr 3 '16 at 20:47


















                    up vote
                    11
                    down vote













                    I upgraded from 10.10 to 11.04 to 12.04 LTS, and when 12.04 loaded for the first time, I had a blank screen after the GRUB menu. It actually booted fine - I could SSH into the system as usual, but the video at the actual console didn't work. Booting into recovery mode worked fine, too. Here was the solution.



                    Hardware = Macbook, early 2008, Macbook4,1. (Black - Early 2008/Penryn)



                    After much trial and error, the solution was the editing and updating GRUB as shown below. The relevant edits were




                    • GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"

                    • GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768


                    sudo nano /etc/defaults/grub
                    sudo update-grub



                    # If you change this file, run 'update-grub' afterwards to update
                    # /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
                    # For full documentation of the options in this file, see:
                    # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration'

                    GRUB_DEFAULT=0
                    #GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0
                    GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true
                    GRUB_TIMEOUT=2
                    GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian`
                    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"
                    GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="nopat"

                    # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs
                    # This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains
                    # the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...)
                    #GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef"

                    # Uncomment to disable graphical terminal (grub-pc only)
                    #GRUB_TERMINAL=console

                    # The resolution used on graphical terminal
                    # note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE
                    # you can see them in real GRUB with the command `vbeinfo'
                    GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768

                    # Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux
                    #GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true

                    # Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries
                    #GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"

                    # Uncomment to get a beep at grub start
                    #GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1"





                    share|improve this answer






























                      up vote
                      11
                      down vote













                      Turns out I had to create a LiveCD and completely reinstall GRUB. After I did this, things are working fine again.



                      Documentation for re-installing grub is here : help.ubuntu.com.






                      share|improve this answer



















                      • 2




                        to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                        – stivlo
                        Apr 12 '12 at 10:43


















                      up vote
                      10
                      down vote













                      This one helped at least a bit:
                      http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=9965194&postcount=8



                      In summary:




                      1. Run gksu gedit /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash.

                      2. In the text editor, add FRAMEBUFFER=y to the file.

                      3. Save the file and quit the text editor.

                      4. Run (in a Terminal): sudo update-initramfs -u






                      share|improve this answer






























                        up vote
                        9
                        down vote













                        I have had this problem a few times. I occasionally get errors detecting one of the HDDs, and I think the boot order gets corrupted in the BIOS. Fixing the boot order solves the boot problem. I have an old Nov 2005 ASUS mobo with a 750 GB WD and a 1.5TB Samsung hard disk.






                        share|improve this answer






























                          up vote
                          8
                          down vote













                          When the grub boot menu comes up, press e to edit the correct boot line. Where it says GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" change this to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset".



                          If this works, then you can install proprietary graphics drivers which should get you going again.



                          If you have trouble with the above, you can change the above line permanently in the grub configuration file.



                          Boot into recovery mode (selection from the grub boot loader) and edit the file /etc/default/grub as per the above instructions.



                          You can edit this file by typing:



                          nano /etc/default/grub


                          You'll have to update the grub menu:



                          update-grub


                          then reboot by typing



                          reboot





                          share|improve this answer






























                            up vote
                            8
                            down vote













                            I had this issue with Ubuntu 12.04 64bit version. I install all goes well, I enable the Nvidia drivers reboot and nothing but a black screen. I re-installed several times with the same results. I then remembered that I had this problem with previous versions of Ubuntu. I downloaded and installed the 32bit version then installed the Nvidia drivers and I did not have this issue. It only happens when I use the 64bit version with the Nvidia drivers.






                            share|improve this answer






























                              up vote
                              8
                              down vote













                              In case that the black screen is only intermittent (and that there might be a blinking cursor), lightgdm having a race condition and not being able to start properly could be the issue.



                              At least that was the case for me. See here for a solution: http://www.webupd8.org/2013/01/ubuntu-lightdm-black-screen-when-using.html (see also this bug report).



                              The gist of it: Use gdm and not lightgdm (i.e. sudo apt-get install gdm, and choose gdm as default login manager when asked).



                              Let me quickly describe the symptoms I had: At first, because also the graphics was having a problem, when this problem occurred, I would only see a blank screen, and no chance to switch to the other terminals by pressing Ctrl+Alt+F1-6 (the screen simply stayed completely black, or rather, a very dark purple or something).



                              This I fixed by adding the "nomodeset" kernel option, as stated e.g. in this answer.



                              But after that, I still intermittently couldn't boot up properly; now it would stop with a blinking cursor. And this, as the above link tells in more detail, is caused by lightdm having a race condition - which manifests itself mainly if the boot-up is very quick, e.g. from an SSD (as it is the case for me).



                              Hope this helps someone.






                              share|improve this answer






























                                up vote
                                7
                                down vote













                                On my notebook I had funny problem. I thought I had black screen two times and I had to shut down it with button. Shortly before I tried again and I barely saw some dark letters in the center of the screen so I pressed the button which brightens up the screen and now it works :)

                                Also, I've used http://sourceforge.net/projects/unetbootin/, maybe it helped.






                                share|improve this answer






























                                  up vote
                                  6
                                  down vote













                                  UBUNTU 12.04 LTS install Problem, stuck/crash at loading screen. (Nvidia Graphics Cards)




                                  1. Remove Graphics Card from your machine.

                                  2. Install Ubuntu (You shouldn't get any errors when running generic driver.)

                                  3. After Ubuntu is installed then put graphics card back into machine while the tower still powered off. Then swap your VGA/HDMI/DVI cables to the graphics card.
                                    Turn on computer and select the recovery option from the GRUB menu then boot normally.


                                  4. Go to Nvidia website and grab the linux driver it will come in .run format



                                  5. Install Driver using the following steps.



                                    a. Move the driver to the desktop and rename it something simple and easy to remember.



                                    b. Ctrl+Alt+F1



                                    c. Run command sudo /etc/init.d/lightdm stop



                                    d. Run command cd ~/Desktop DRIVERNAME.run (What you renamed it.)



                                    e. Run command chmod +x DRIVERNAME.run



                                    f. Run command sudo ./DRIVERNAME.run



                                    g. Follow instructions and continue



                                    TIP If you still get hung with "It appears you are running "X" server then change the command on Step 5c to as follows: sudo /etc/init.d/gdm stop



                                  6. Ctrl+Alt+F7


                                  7. Ctrl+Alt+t (Only use steps 7 & 8 if you can't access the restart button or see your screen.)


                                  8. Run the command Shutdown -h (OR sudo shutdown 0 -h if the other command fails.)


                                  9. Boot computer and enjoy :) I suggest printing these instructions.



                                  PS I am not sure if you can place graphics card into PC after installation this is the way it worked for me and I am passing it on. I might suggest trying to install the graphics card on step 1 with machine off first as it is much safer this way.






                                  share|improve this answer






























                                    up vote
                                    4
                                    down vote













                                    I tried those methods as well -- no joy. Here's what did worked for me.



                                    Here's the part that was useful:



                                    Getting 1366x768 resolution



                                    Create file /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution



                                    echo insmod 915resolution
                                    echo 915resolution 58 1366 768 32


                                    and execute:



                                    chmod +x /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution


                                    In file /etc/default/grub, assign value 1366x768x32 to variables GRUB_GFXMODE and GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX:



                                    GRUB_GFXMODE=1366x768x32
                                    GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=1366x768x32


                                    Execute:



                                    sudo update-grub


                                    reboot, now you have 1366x768 resolution.





                                    Actually, I already had this resolution. But the added commands got rid of the black screen on boot-up and the need to switch video modes.






                                    share|improve this answer






























                                      up vote
                                      4
                                      down vote













                                      This is specific to where the install fails and your installation behaves badly.



                                      Requeriments




                                      • You need access to the Recovery menu, if you don't then look for other options.

                                      • Internet access with a DHCP-enabled network

                                      • GUTS! Since this is a delicate process.


                                      Procedure




                                      1. Once you are in the recovery menu, select Activate Networking.

                                      2. Now select drop to a root shell.

                                      3. Run mount -a. (In my case that bad was the installation that I was forced to do this)

                                      4. Verify that your network is up and running: ping -c 2 4.2.2.2 If this fails run dhclient. ping -c google.com if this fails run dhclient.

                                      5. Now update your repositories: apt-get update

                                      6. Install debsums: apt-get install debsums

                                      7. Run debsums -s. It will give you a list of packages that have problems. Take note of each.

                                      8. Now reinstall the packages that has problems: apt-get --reinstall install packages.

                                      9. Update your grub just in case. update-grub.

                                      10. Reboot and good luck.






                                      share|improve this answer






























                                        up vote
                                        3
                                        down vote













                                        After upgrading from 12.10 to 13.04, the login screen is black because brightness is set to lowest level (Intel Integrated Graphics)



                                        I've noticed that it would be a brightness problem cause I've listened to the Ubuntu's default drum sound when booting for the first time after upgrading. Before I find this solution, I had to increase the brightness level to see anything on the screen.



                                        For me, the solution came from this bug report at https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/1173059, by changing /etc/default/grub as root this way:



                                        Make a backup file, so you'll be able to restore it, if this solution doesn't work:



                                        sudo cp /etc/default/grub /etc/default/grub.original


                                        To open the file with sudo you can use this in the Terminal, for example:



                                        sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


                                        Then, replace:



                                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


                                        to



                                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_osi=Linux acpi_backlight=vendor"


                                        You'll need to run update-grub2 to apply the change:



                                        sudo update-grub2


                                        That's it. After rebooting, it worked flawlessly for me (that is, my login screen has a normal brightness level).






                                        share|improve this answer






























                                          up vote
                                          2
                                          down vote













                                          It turns out the ATI Catalyst drivers were not compatible with the 13.10. I ended up re-installing the OS from the live CD and everything went fine, except now I have to figure out why there is no sound.






                                          share|improve this answer




























                                            up vote
                                            1
                                            down vote













                                            I just had a similar issue with Xubuntu after installing ATI catalyst drivers. Purging the 2 fglrx packages allowed me to log in properly and have a desktop....though without the proper drivers and acceleration.






                                            share|improve this answer




























                                              up vote
                                              1
                                              down vote













                                              situation 1) Impossible to solve at uefi-black-screen - uefi-bios has to be visible so you could then use an live-usb-stick properly. The accumulator has a chip too, this way the ransomware attacks via this chip...




                                              a) pull out accumulator after machine is switched off (20 seconds pressing slightly the power-button off).



                                              b) pull off the power-supply cable both ends.



                                              c) after waiting only do use the power-supply cable



                                              d) switch on and quickly two fingers changing pressing 'ESC' and 'F2'



                                              e) disable recovery mode of uefi-settings



                                              f) disable secure-boot



                                              g) get sure that usb-booting order allows usb-live-stick at 1st place !!!
                                              save and reboot from bios (leave accumulator away)



                                              h) re-install ubuntu or repair the disk with ubuntu-recovery-modes, but I would prefer complete new installation alongside previous ubuntu-installation and delete Windows.
                                              i) you need to delete Windows, because the chip of the accumulator wants to make a revival of ransomware for windows as previous first-boot-installation.




                                              situation 2) Black screen with Windows on booting first hard-disk, then it is deadly sure ransomware:



                                              ... I had black screen today in the morning too, but my password was too long ... so the ransomware had no luck, despite of fact that I dont have dual-boot installation with windows here. There was only an buffer-overrun visible at my machine. I rebooted and the buffer-overrun (or underrun? - hybrid device here ...) was gone.



                                              In case Jorge Castro has a dual-boot installation with Windows (no-matter-which-one) then I simply would press quick changing with two fingers the keys 'esc' and 'F2' to get back into uefi-bios before the machine boots into black screen after you have pressed the switch-off-button slightly for 20 seconds.



                                              Replay:




                                              a) switch-off the machine with slightly pressing 20 seconds the power- supply-button



                                              b) wait a while ... in case of notebook pull the plugin-cable of power- supply and stick it in again, then take out the accumulator and put it in again.



                                              c) wait a while ... then switch-on your machine



                                              d) now quick changing with two fingers between key 'F2' and 'ESC'



                                              e) uefi-bios should appear again ... then this is not finish !



                                              f like foolproof) decide the boot-mode whether to enable or disable secure-boot (http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/17058-secure-boot-enable-disable-uefi.html). This decides whether you get back into windows to launch really http://malwarebytes.org - program.



                                              g like gentleman) this is not gentleman-style but I saved your day.



                                              When malwarebytes - program finished its job and avast too finished its job, use then a freeware registry-cleaner (http://heise.de)




                                              situation 3.) This way ubuntu-recovery should work again after step 1.) and step 2.)




                                              a) free the memory



                                              b) repair the file-system



                                              c) go into root - terminal



                                              type there:



                                              sudo apt-get install --reinstall grub* --fix-missing



                                              sudo apt-get update



                                              sudo update-grub2



                                              sudo passwd (new password like method here : http://nosy-x.com/password-001.html in paranoid method a suiting quantum-password)



                                              happy coding and dont forget to eat a meal ...







                                              share|improve this answer























                                              • -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                Dec 31 '16 at 23:51


















                                              up vote
                                              1
                                              down vote













                                              I have just had the same problem on Ubuntu 14.04.2. And this solved it:



                                               apt-get install ubuntu-desktop





                                              share|improve this answer



























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                                                up vote
                                                326
                                                down vote



                                                +100










                                                If you are trying to install Ubuntu



                                                1. Ensuring your CD/DVD or USB flash drive burned/written correctly and not damaged:





                                                • How to MD5 test Ubuntu ISOs. See also: Where to find the checksums of Ubuntu ISO images? or MD5 hash for ubuntu .iso (14.04 through 17.04)

                                                • Check out these steps to see how to check your CD once you boot into it to make sure it's ready to go.


                                                • Verify the integrity of the burned CD/DVD or written USB flash drive (this also checks that it's accessible by the computer on which you wish to install).


                                                2. Black/purple screen when you try to boot the LiveCD



                                                The Ubuntu installer's startup portion is sometimes incompatible with certain graphics cards. Fixing it and getting to the Ubuntu Desktop to try or install it can often be surprisingly easy fix: the nomodeset parameter. To see if it works for you:





                                                • Boot from the Desktop Live CD and press the key when you see the below:



                                                  screen shot 1




                                                • Press Enter and select English:



                                                  screen shot 2




                                                • Press F6, use the keys to go down to nomodeset, and press Enter. An x will appear to its left. Then press Esc, and press Enter to "Try Ubuntu without installing."



                                                  screen shot 3




                                                You can also try acpi = off and nolapic if nomodset also shows up as a black screen.



                                                3. Black screen



                                                or



                                                "you need to load kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0" errors



                                                when installing to an UEFI capable machine:



                                                Ubuntu's installer 'when attempting to run in UEFI mode) will hang and stop due to different manufacturer's implementations of the UEFI specification and will hang in different ways.
                                                To identify if your machine is booting in installer UEFI mode you will see



                                                screen shot 4



                                                REF: UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation Section 2.4



                                                If your machine is CSM capable (which is a full UEFI implementation with an emulated BIOS layer) after selecting any option from the grub list the system will hang at a black screen.



                                                The picture above actually only confirms your DVD/USB booted using UEFI and there will be some means in firmware settings to ensure drives are booted in order to make the UEFI installer run (a solution may possibly be as simple as ensuring SATA is set to AHCI) - check your vendors manual! Also check the UEFI Community Documentation Section 2.3 for more details.



                                                What you need to do first is to disable SECURE BOOT in the firmware settings.
                                                If that does not get the Ubuntu installer running, try disabling anything mentioning UEFI in the firmware settings.
                                                Or

                                                If you cannot find UEFI settings then enable CSM - this will disable the UEFI booting of the installer and then allow a legacy/BIOS install of Ubuntu.

                                                Installing grub-efi afterwards will allow UEFI to be re-enabled. Again refer to UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4



                                                Some machines use a full BIOS with an emulated UEFI layer which may throw errors as described ie "you need to load the kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0"



                                                Not all of these machines implement Secure Boot. Simply selecting UEFI in the BIOS settings will configure UEFI mode on hard drives. There is no solution for these errors and the workaround is to disable UEFI to enable the Ubuntu installer to run in legacy mode; after which boot-repair can be used to install grub-efi which then allows/needs UEFI switched back on before Ubuntu will boot using UEFI. Once again refer to the UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4





                                                Black/purple screen after you boot Ubuntu for the first time



                                                This usually happens because you have an Nvidia or AMD graphics card, or a laptop with Optimus or switchable/hybrid graphics, and Ubuntu does not have the proprietary drivers installed to allow it to work with these.



                                                The solution is to boot Ubuntu once in nomodeset mode (your screen may look weird) to bypass the black screen, download and install the drivers, and then reboot to fix it for ever.





                                                • Start your computer, and press the Right Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (usually the first one).



                                                  screen shot 5




                                                • Press e to edit that entry, which will show you the details:



                                                  screen shot 6




                                                • Find the linux entry as shown above, use the keys to get to it, and then press the End key to get to that line's end (which may be on the next line!).



                                                  screen shot 7




                                                  • Enter nomodeset as shown, and press Ctrl+X to boot to where you can successfully install your graphics drivers.




                                                If you are running Ubuntu 12.04 or 12.10, and have a ATI/AMD graphics card, you have to follow the instructions here, otherwise you will run into this problem every time you restart your computer.



                                                LUKS encryption



                                                In case you've installed Ubuntu with LUKS encryption / LVM option, it could be that Ubuntu just asks you for your password - and you cannot see it.
                                                If you have a black screen, try pressing Alt+ and then Alt+ to switch your tty, this may bring back the password query and turn backlight back on.



                                                If you have a purple screen (maybe you need to set the nomodeset-option also?) and you have encrypted your complete Ubuntu installation, try to just type your encryption/LUKS-password after waiting some seconds (or minutes, just to be sure) and continue with a press on Enter. If this is successfull, you should see your Login-screen just a few seconds later.






                                                1. Try the Alternate Installer - this is a text based installer that might work better than the liveCD depending on your hardware.
                                                  If you do this, you may get a black screen before you even hit grub. A simple Ctrl+Alt+Del gets some users to a usable grub screen


                                                2. If you have an Nvidia Optimus card you should NOT install nvidia drivers, just use the built in driver, see here:




                                                  • Is a NVIDIA GeForce with Optimus Technology supported by Ubuntu?



                                                3. After selecting boot options you have the opportunity to edit the boot flags manually using your keyboard. Replace quiet splash with no splash to get an idea of what step your system is failing at. Using that information search the forums or the internet for answers from the community.


                                                4. If you still can't install Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into a hardware specific bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?







                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                • 10




                                                  Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
                                                  – n00b
                                                  Feb 12 '13 at 2:49






                                                • 7




                                                  +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
                                                  – eduncan911
                                                  Jan 13 '14 at 22:04






                                                • 6




                                                  I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
                                                  – Alan B
                                                  May 1 '14 at 8:23








                                                • 2




                                                  What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
                                                  – Hendra Anggrian
                                                  Nov 18 '16 at 14:01








                                                • 1




                                                  For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
                                                  – M.A.K. Ripon
                                                  Dec 11 '17 at 4:08















                                                up vote
                                                326
                                                down vote



                                                +100










                                                If you are trying to install Ubuntu



                                                1. Ensuring your CD/DVD or USB flash drive burned/written correctly and not damaged:





                                                • How to MD5 test Ubuntu ISOs. See also: Where to find the checksums of Ubuntu ISO images? or MD5 hash for ubuntu .iso (14.04 through 17.04)

                                                • Check out these steps to see how to check your CD once you boot into it to make sure it's ready to go.


                                                • Verify the integrity of the burned CD/DVD or written USB flash drive (this also checks that it's accessible by the computer on which you wish to install).


                                                2. Black/purple screen when you try to boot the LiveCD



                                                The Ubuntu installer's startup portion is sometimes incompatible with certain graphics cards. Fixing it and getting to the Ubuntu Desktop to try or install it can often be surprisingly easy fix: the nomodeset parameter. To see if it works for you:





                                                • Boot from the Desktop Live CD and press the key when you see the below:



                                                  screen shot 1




                                                • Press Enter and select English:



                                                  screen shot 2




                                                • Press F6, use the keys to go down to nomodeset, and press Enter. An x will appear to its left. Then press Esc, and press Enter to "Try Ubuntu without installing."



                                                  screen shot 3




                                                You can also try acpi = off and nolapic if nomodset also shows up as a black screen.



                                                3. Black screen



                                                or



                                                "you need to load kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0" errors



                                                when installing to an UEFI capable machine:



                                                Ubuntu's installer 'when attempting to run in UEFI mode) will hang and stop due to different manufacturer's implementations of the UEFI specification and will hang in different ways.
                                                To identify if your machine is booting in installer UEFI mode you will see



                                                screen shot 4



                                                REF: UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation Section 2.4



                                                If your machine is CSM capable (which is a full UEFI implementation with an emulated BIOS layer) after selecting any option from the grub list the system will hang at a black screen.



                                                The picture above actually only confirms your DVD/USB booted using UEFI and there will be some means in firmware settings to ensure drives are booted in order to make the UEFI installer run (a solution may possibly be as simple as ensuring SATA is set to AHCI) - check your vendors manual! Also check the UEFI Community Documentation Section 2.3 for more details.



                                                What you need to do first is to disable SECURE BOOT in the firmware settings.
                                                If that does not get the Ubuntu installer running, try disabling anything mentioning UEFI in the firmware settings.
                                                Or

                                                If you cannot find UEFI settings then enable CSM - this will disable the UEFI booting of the installer and then allow a legacy/BIOS install of Ubuntu.

                                                Installing grub-efi afterwards will allow UEFI to be re-enabled. Again refer to UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4



                                                Some machines use a full BIOS with an emulated UEFI layer which may throw errors as described ie "you need to load the kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0"



                                                Not all of these machines implement Secure Boot. Simply selecting UEFI in the BIOS settings will configure UEFI mode on hard drives. There is no solution for these errors and the workaround is to disable UEFI to enable the Ubuntu installer to run in legacy mode; after which boot-repair can be used to install grub-efi which then allows/needs UEFI switched back on before Ubuntu will boot using UEFI. Once again refer to the UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4





                                                Black/purple screen after you boot Ubuntu for the first time



                                                This usually happens because you have an Nvidia or AMD graphics card, or a laptop with Optimus or switchable/hybrid graphics, and Ubuntu does not have the proprietary drivers installed to allow it to work with these.



                                                The solution is to boot Ubuntu once in nomodeset mode (your screen may look weird) to bypass the black screen, download and install the drivers, and then reboot to fix it for ever.





                                                • Start your computer, and press the Right Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (usually the first one).



                                                  screen shot 5




                                                • Press e to edit that entry, which will show you the details:



                                                  screen shot 6




                                                • Find the linux entry as shown above, use the keys to get to it, and then press the End key to get to that line's end (which may be on the next line!).



                                                  screen shot 7




                                                  • Enter nomodeset as shown, and press Ctrl+X to boot to where you can successfully install your graphics drivers.




                                                If you are running Ubuntu 12.04 or 12.10, and have a ATI/AMD graphics card, you have to follow the instructions here, otherwise you will run into this problem every time you restart your computer.



                                                LUKS encryption



                                                In case you've installed Ubuntu with LUKS encryption / LVM option, it could be that Ubuntu just asks you for your password - and you cannot see it.
                                                If you have a black screen, try pressing Alt+ and then Alt+ to switch your tty, this may bring back the password query and turn backlight back on.



                                                If you have a purple screen (maybe you need to set the nomodeset-option also?) and you have encrypted your complete Ubuntu installation, try to just type your encryption/LUKS-password after waiting some seconds (or minutes, just to be sure) and continue with a press on Enter. If this is successfull, you should see your Login-screen just a few seconds later.






                                                1. Try the Alternate Installer - this is a text based installer that might work better than the liveCD depending on your hardware.
                                                  If you do this, you may get a black screen before you even hit grub. A simple Ctrl+Alt+Del gets some users to a usable grub screen


                                                2. If you have an Nvidia Optimus card you should NOT install nvidia drivers, just use the built in driver, see here:




                                                  • Is a NVIDIA GeForce with Optimus Technology supported by Ubuntu?



                                                3. After selecting boot options you have the opportunity to edit the boot flags manually using your keyboard. Replace quiet splash with no splash to get an idea of what step your system is failing at. Using that information search the forums or the internet for answers from the community.


                                                4. If you still can't install Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into a hardware specific bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?







                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                • 10




                                                  Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
                                                  – n00b
                                                  Feb 12 '13 at 2:49






                                                • 7




                                                  +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
                                                  – eduncan911
                                                  Jan 13 '14 at 22:04






                                                • 6




                                                  I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
                                                  – Alan B
                                                  May 1 '14 at 8:23








                                                • 2




                                                  What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
                                                  – Hendra Anggrian
                                                  Nov 18 '16 at 14:01








                                                • 1




                                                  For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
                                                  – M.A.K. Ripon
                                                  Dec 11 '17 at 4:08













                                                up vote
                                                326
                                                down vote



                                                +100







                                                up vote
                                                326
                                                down vote



                                                +100




                                                +100




                                                If you are trying to install Ubuntu



                                                1. Ensuring your CD/DVD or USB flash drive burned/written correctly and not damaged:





                                                • How to MD5 test Ubuntu ISOs. See also: Where to find the checksums of Ubuntu ISO images? or MD5 hash for ubuntu .iso (14.04 through 17.04)

                                                • Check out these steps to see how to check your CD once you boot into it to make sure it's ready to go.


                                                • Verify the integrity of the burned CD/DVD or written USB flash drive (this also checks that it's accessible by the computer on which you wish to install).


                                                2. Black/purple screen when you try to boot the LiveCD



                                                The Ubuntu installer's startup portion is sometimes incompatible with certain graphics cards. Fixing it and getting to the Ubuntu Desktop to try or install it can often be surprisingly easy fix: the nomodeset parameter. To see if it works for you:





                                                • Boot from the Desktop Live CD and press the key when you see the below:



                                                  screen shot 1




                                                • Press Enter and select English:



                                                  screen shot 2




                                                • Press F6, use the keys to go down to nomodeset, and press Enter. An x will appear to its left. Then press Esc, and press Enter to "Try Ubuntu without installing."



                                                  screen shot 3




                                                You can also try acpi = off and nolapic if nomodset also shows up as a black screen.



                                                3. Black screen



                                                or



                                                "you need to load kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0" errors



                                                when installing to an UEFI capable machine:



                                                Ubuntu's installer 'when attempting to run in UEFI mode) will hang and stop due to different manufacturer's implementations of the UEFI specification and will hang in different ways.
                                                To identify if your machine is booting in installer UEFI mode you will see



                                                screen shot 4



                                                REF: UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation Section 2.4



                                                If your machine is CSM capable (which is a full UEFI implementation with an emulated BIOS layer) after selecting any option from the grub list the system will hang at a black screen.



                                                The picture above actually only confirms your DVD/USB booted using UEFI and there will be some means in firmware settings to ensure drives are booted in order to make the UEFI installer run (a solution may possibly be as simple as ensuring SATA is set to AHCI) - check your vendors manual! Also check the UEFI Community Documentation Section 2.3 for more details.



                                                What you need to do first is to disable SECURE BOOT in the firmware settings.
                                                If that does not get the Ubuntu installer running, try disabling anything mentioning UEFI in the firmware settings.
                                                Or

                                                If you cannot find UEFI settings then enable CSM - this will disable the UEFI booting of the installer and then allow a legacy/BIOS install of Ubuntu.

                                                Installing grub-efi afterwards will allow UEFI to be re-enabled. Again refer to UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4



                                                Some machines use a full BIOS with an emulated UEFI layer which may throw errors as described ie "you need to load the kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0"



                                                Not all of these machines implement Secure Boot. Simply selecting UEFI in the BIOS settings will configure UEFI mode on hard drives. There is no solution for these errors and the workaround is to disable UEFI to enable the Ubuntu installer to run in legacy mode; after which boot-repair can be used to install grub-efi which then allows/needs UEFI switched back on before Ubuntu will boot using UEFI. Once again refer to the UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4





                                                Black/purple screen after you boot Ubuntu for the first time



                                                This usually happens because you have an Nvidia or AMD graphics card, or a laptop with Optimus or switchable/hybrid graphics, and Ubuntu does not have the proprietary drivers installed to allow it to work with these.



                                                The solution is to boot Ubuntu once in nomodeset mode (your screen may look weird) to bypass the black screen, download and install the drivers, and then reboot to fix it for ever.





                                                • Start your computer, and press the Right Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (usually the first one).



                                                  screen shot 5




                                                • Press e to edit that entry, which will show you the details:



                                                  screen shot 6




                                                • Find the linux entry as shown above, use the keys to get to it, and then press the End key to get to that line's end (which may be on the next line!).



                                                  screen shot 7




                                                  • Enter nomodeset as shown, and press Ctrl+X to boot to where you can successfully install your graphics drivers.




                                                If you are running Ubuntu 12.04 or 12.10, and have a ATI/AMD graphics card, you have to follow the instructions here, otherwise you will run into this problem every time you restart your computer.



                                                LUKS encryption



                                                In case you've installed Ubuntu with LUKS encryption / LVM option, it could be that Ubuntu just asks you for your password - and you cannot see it.
                                                If you have a black screen, try pressing Alt+ and then Alt+ to switch your tty, this may bring back the password query and turn backlight back on.



                                                If you have a purple screen (maybe you need to set the nomodeset-option also?) and you have encrypted your complete Ubuntu installation, try to just type your encryption/LUKS-password after waiting some seconds (or minutes, just to be sure) and continue with a press on Enter. If this is successfull, you should see your Login-screen just a few seconds later.






                                                1. Try the Alternate Installer - this is a text based installer that might work better than the liveCD depending on your hardware.
                                                  If you do this, you may get a black screen before you even hit grub. A simple Ctrl+Alt+Del gets some users to a usable grub screen


                                                2. If you have an Nvidia Optimus card you should NOT install nvidia drivers, just use the built in driver, see here:




                                                  • Is a NVIDIA GeForce with Optimus Technology supported by Ubuntu?



                                                3. After selecting boot options you have the opportunity to edit the boot flags manually using your keyboard. Replace quiet splash with no splash to get an idea of what step your system is failing at. Using that information search the forums or the internet for answers from the community.


                                                4. If you still can't install Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into a hardware specific bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                If you are trying to install Ubuntu



                                                1. Ensuring your CD/DVD or USB flash drive burned/written correctly and not damaged:





                                                • How to MD5 test Ubuntu ISOs. See also: Where to find the checksums of Ubuntu ISO images? or MD5 hash for ubuntu .iso (14.04 through 17.04)

                                                • Check out these steps to see how to check your CD once you boot into it to make sure it's ready to go.


                                                • Verify the integrity of the burned CD/DVD or written USB flash drive (this also checks that it's accessible by the computer on which you wish to install).


                                                2. Black/purple screen when you try to boot the LiveCD



                                                The Ubuntu installer's startup portion is sometimes incompatible with certain graphics cards. Fixing it and getting to the Ubuntu Desktop to try or install it can often be surprisingly easy fix: the nomodeset parameter. To see if it works for you:





                                                • Boot from the Desktop Live CD and press the key when you see the below:



                                                  screen shot 1




                                                • Press Enter and select English:



                                                  screen shot 2




                                                • Press F6, use the keys to go down to nomodeset, and press Enter. An x will appear to its left. Then press Esc, and press Enter to "Try Ubuntu without installing."



                                                  screen shot 3




                                                You can also try acpi = off and nolapic if nomodset also shows up as a black screen.



                                                3. Black screen



                                                or



                                                "you need to load kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0" errors



                                                when installing to an UEFI capable machine:



                                                Ubuntu's installer 'when attempting to run in UEFI mode) will hang and stop due to different manufacturer's implementations of the UEFI specification and will hang in different ways.
                                                To identify if your machine is booting in installer UEFI mode you will see



                                                screen shot 4



                                                REF: UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation Section 2.4



                                                If your machine is CSM capable (which is a full UEFI implementation with an emulated BIOS layer) after selecting any option from the grub list the system will hang at a black screen.



                                                The picture above actually only confirms your DVD/USB booted using UEFI and there will be some means in firmware settings to ensure drives are booted in order to make the UEFI installer run (a solution may possibly be as simple as ensuring SATA is set to AHCI) - check your vendors manual! Also check the UEFI Community Documentation Section 2.3 for more details.



                                                What you need to do first is to disable SECURE BOOT in the firmware settings.
                                                If that does not get the Ubuntu installer running, try disabling anything mentioning UEFI in the firmware settings.
                                                Or

                                                If you cannot find UEFI settings then enable CSM - this will disable the UEFI booting of the installer and then allow a legacy/BIOS install of Ubuntu.

                                                Installing grub-efi afterwards will allow UEFI to be re-enabled. Again refer to UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4



                                                Some machines use a full BIOS with an emulated UEFI layer which may throw errors as described ie "you need to load the kernel first" and "can not read file/cd0"



                                                Not all of these machines implement Secure Boot. Simply selecting UEFI in the BIOS settings will configure UEFI mode on hard drives. There is no solution for these errors and the workaround is to disable UEFI to enable the Ubuntu installer to run in legacy mode; after which boot-repair can be used to install grub-efi which then allows/needs UEFI switched back on before Ubuntu will boot using UEFI. Once again refer to the UEFI Community Ubuntu Documentation at Section 4





                                                Black/purple screen after you boot Ubuntu for the first time



                                                This usually happens because you have an Nvidia or AMD graphics card, or a laptop with Optimus or switchable/hybrid graphics, and Ubuntu does not have the proprietary drivers installed to allow it to work with these.



                                                The solution is to boot Ubuntu once in nomodeset mode (your screen may look weird) to bypass the black screen, download and install the drivers, and then reboot to fix it for ever.





                                                • Start your computer, and press the Right Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (usually the first one).



                                                  screen shot 5




                                                • Press e to edit that entry, which will show you the details:



                                                  screen shot 6




                                                • Find the linux entry as shown above, use the keys to get to it, and then press the End key to get to that line's end (which may be on the next line!).



                                                  screen shot 7




                                                  • Enter nomodeset as shown, and press Ctrl+X to boot to where you can successfully install your graphics drivers.




                                                If you are running Ubuntu 12.04 or 12.10, and have a ATI/AMD graphics card, you have to follow the instructions here, otherwise you will run into this problem every time you restart your computer.



                                                LUKS encryption



                                                In case you've installed Ubuntu with LUKS encryption / LVM option, it could be that Ubuntu just asks you for your password - and you cannot see it.
                                                If you have a black screen, try pressing Alt+ and then Alt+ to switch your tty, this may bring back the password query and turn backlight back on.



                                                If you have a purple screen (maybe you need to set the nomodeset-option also?) and you have encrypted your complete Ubuntu installation, try to just type your encryption/LUKS-password after waiting some seconds (or minutes, just to be sure) and continue with a press on Enter. If this is successfull, you should see your Login-screen just a few seconds later.






                                                1. Try the Alternate Installer - this is a text based installer that might work better than the liveCD depending on your hardware.
                                                  If you do this, you may get a black screen before you even hit grub. A simple Ctrl+Alt+Del gets some users to a usable grub screen


                                                2. If you have an Nvidia Optimus card you should NOT install nvidia drivers, just use the built in driver, see here:




                                                  • Is a NVIDIA GeForce with Optimus Technology supported by Ubuntu?



                                                3. After selecting boot options you have the opportunity to edit the boot flags manually using your keyboard. Replace quiet splash with no splash to get an idea of what step your system is failing at. Using that information search the forums or the internet for answers from the community.


                                                4. If you still can't install Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into a hardware specific bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?








                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited Jul 22 '17 at 20:02


























                                                community wiki





                                                24 revs, 16 users 23%
                                                izx









                                                • 10




                                                  Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
                                                  – n00b
                                                  Feb 12 '13 at 2:49






                                                • 7




                                                  +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
                                                  – eduncan911
                                                  Jan 13 '14 at 22:04






                                                • 6




                                                  I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
                                                  – Alan B
                                                  May 1 '14 at 8:23








                                                • 2




                                                  What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
                                                  – Hendra Anggrian
                                                  Nov 18 '16 at 14:01








                                                • 1




                                                  For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
                                                  – M.A.K. Ripon
                                                  Dec 11 '17 at 4:08














                                                • 10




                                                  Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
                                                  – n00b
                                                  Feb 12 '13 at 2:49






                                                • 7




                                                  +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
                                                  – eduncan911
                                                  Jan 13 '14 at 22:04






                                                • 6




                                                  I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
                                                  – Alan B
                                                  May 1 '14 at 8:23








                                                • 2




                                                  What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
                                                  – Hendra Anggrian
                                                  Nov 18 '16 at 14:01








                                                • 1




                                                  For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
                                                  – M.A.K. Ripon
                                                  Dec 11 '17 at 4:08








                                                10




                                                10




                                                Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
                                                – n00b
                                                Feb 12 '13 at 2:49




                                                Incase it helps anybody, if you're using a USB stick, be sure you actually burn the ISO onto the stick and not just copy it :) I used Universal USB Installer
                                                – n00b
                                                Feb 12 '13 at 2:49




                                                7




                                                7




                                                +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
                                                – eduncan911
                                                Jan 13 '14 at 22:04




                                                +1 You would have thought that Ubuntu would boot into nomodset by default, like Windows boots with Standard VGA driver by default. Still far from a user-friendly install, but thanks to this I got past my black screens (two of them, USB installer, and once installed for Nvidia drivers). #Fail
                                                – eduncan911
                                                Jan 13 '14 at 22:04




                                                6




                                                6




                                                I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
                                                – Alan B
                                                May 1 '14 at 8:23






                                                I love Ubuntu and use it every day, but when a major version upgrade on a laptop with one of the commonest graphics and mobo chipsets in the world leaves you at a situation with a black screen and blanking cursor that probably only a reinstall from a live CD will fix, it makes me wonder why people think it will displace Windows any time soon. Why do I have to choose between crap graphics performance or a proprietary driver that will wreck an install when an upgrade happens?
                                                – Alan B
                                                May 1 '14 at 8:23






                                                2




                                                2




                                                What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
                                                – Hendra Anggrian
                                                Nov 18 '16 at 14:01






                                                What if even after "nomodeset" I still have blank screen when I try to boot Ubuntu for the first time after installation?
                                                – Hendra Anggrian
                                                Nov 18 '16 at 14:01






                                                1




                                                1




                                                For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
                                                – M.A.K. Ripon
                                                Dec 11 '17 at 4:08




                                                For any noob to expert level this the best answer on web for this solution. Thumbs Up.
                                                – M.A.K. Ripon
                                                Dec 11 '17 at 4:08












                                                up vote
                                                74
                                                down vote













                                                If an update or something else caused your boot problem:





                                                1. Freezes:




                                                  • Freeze troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki

                                                  • Blank Screen troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki




                                                2. nVidia Users:




                                                  • Blank screen after installing nvidia restricted driver

                                                  • Graphics issues after/while installing Ubuntu 16.04/16.10 with NVIDIA graphics




                                                3. ATI/AMD Users:




                                                  • Fglrx causes serious bug-black screen!




                                                4. Grub recovery cross links




                                                  • How to enable boot messages to be printed on screen during boot up?

                                                  • How do I investigate boot and partition issues?




                                                5. Reinstalling your machine




                                                  • I can't boot into a usable system after updates. What should I do?




                                                6. Sometimes a kernel upgrade can cause problems, especially if you're using closed drivers, you can confirm if this is the case by booting into your old kernel.





                                                  • How can I boot with an older kernel version?
                                                    If your old kernel works then you've found a bug in the new kernel, see the end of this post to report it to the kernel team!

                                                  • Debugging the Kernel Boot at the Ubuntu Wiki



                                                7. LiveCD recovery crosslinks


                                                8. and so on ...

                                                9. If you still can't boot Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into some other kind of bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                • What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
                                                  – mc.dev
                                                  Jun 13 at 4:02















                                                up vote
                                                74
                                                down vote













                                                If an update or something else caused your boot problem:





                                                1. Freezes:




                                                  • Freeze troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki

                                                  • Blank Screen troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki




                                                2. nVidia Users:




                                                  • Blank screen after installing nvidia restricted driver

                                                  • Graphics issues after/while installing Ubuntu 16.04/16.10 with NVIDIA graphics




                                                3. ATI/AMD Users:




                                                  • Fglrx causes serious bug-black screen!




                                                4. Grub recovery cross links




                                                  • How to enable boot messages to be printed on screen during boot up?

                                                  • How do I investigate boot and partition issues?




                                                5. Reinstalling your machine




                                                  • I can't boot into a usable system after updates. What should I do?




                                                6. Sometimes a kernel upgrade can cause problems, especially if you're using closed drivers, you can confirm if this is the case by booting into your old kernel.





                                                  • How can I boot with an older kernel version?
                                                    If your old kernel works then you've found a bug in the new kernel, see the end of this post to report it to the kernel team!

                                                  • Debugging the Kernel Boot at the Ubuntu Wiki



                                                7. LiveCD recovery crosslinks


                                                8. and so on ...

                                                9. If you still can't boot Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into some other kind of bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                • What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
                                                  – mc.dev
                                                  Jun 13 at 4:02













                                                up vote
                                                74
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                74
                                                down vote









                                                If an update or something else caused your boot problem:





                                                1. Freezes:




                                                  • Freeze troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki

                                                  • Blank Screen troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki




                                                2. nVidia Users:




                                                  • Blank screen after installing nvidia restricted driver

                                                  • Graphics issues after/while installing Ubuntu 16.04/16.10 with NVIDIA graphics




                                                3. ATI/AMD Users:




                                                  • Fglrx causes serious bug-black screen!




                                                4. Grub recovery cross links




                                                  • How to enable boot messages to be printed on screen during boot up?

                                                  • How do I investigate boot and partition issues?




                                                5. Reinstalling your machine




                                                  • I can't boot into a usable system after updates. What should I do?




                                                6. Sometimes a kernel upgrade can cause problems, especially if you're using closed drivers, you can confirm if this is the case by booting into your old kernel.





                                                  • How can I boot with an older kernel version?
                                                    If your old kernel works then you've found a bug in the new kernel, see the end of this post to report it to the kernel team!

                                                  • Debugging the Kernel Boot at the Ubuntu Wiki



                                                7. LiveCD recovery crosslinks


                                                8. and so on ...

                                                9. If you still can't boot Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into some other kind of bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?






                                                share|improve this answer














                                                If an update or something else caused your boot problem:





                                                1. Freezes:




                                                  • Freeze troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki

                                                  • Blank Screen troubleshooting at the Ubuntu Wiki




                                                2. nVidia Users:




                                                  • Blank screen after installing nvidia restricted driver

                                                  • Graphics issues after/while installing Ubuntu 16.04/16.10 with NVIDIA graphics




                                                3. ATI/AMD Users:




                                                  • Fglrx causes serious bug-black screen!




                                                4. Grub recovery cross links




                                                  • How to enable boot messages to be printed on screen during boot up?

                                                  • How do I investigate boot and partition issues?




                                                5. Reinstalling your machine




                                                  • I can't boot into a usable system after updates. What should I do?




                                                6. Sometimes a kernel upgrade can cause problems, especially if you're using closed drivers, you can confirm if this is the case by booting into your old kernel.





                                                  • How can I boot with an older kernel version?
                                                    If your old kernel works then you've found a bug in the new kernel, see the end of this post to report it to the kernel team!

                                                  • Debugging the Kernel Boot at the Ubuntu Wiki



                                                7. LiveCD recovery crosslinks


                                                8. and so on ...

                                                9. If you still can't boot Ubuntu then unfortunately you've probably run into some other kind of bug, please see here: How do I report a bug?







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24


























                                                community wiki





                                                10 revs, 3 users 75%
                                                Jorge Castro













                                                • What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
                                                  – mc.dev
                                                  Jun 13 at 4:02


















                                                • What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
                                                  – mc.dev
                                                  Jun 13 at 4:02
















                                                What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
                                                – mc.dev
                                                Jun 13 at 4:02




                                                What helped me after all is to load in recovery mode (initial grub boot menu) and in System Settings -> Driver Manager change video driver from 'nvidia-396' to 'xserver-xorg-video-nouveau'. After that I was able to boot in normal (non-recovery mode). I have laptop Dell XPS with Nvidia GF GK107M.
                                                – mc.dev
                                                Jun 13 at 4:02










                                                up vote
                                                63
                                                down vote













                                                If your system is dual boot:



                                                Link up the following:





                                                • Boot sector repair



                                                  Boot-Repair




                                                • grub stuff



                                                  Installing and Re-installing GRUB




                                                • If you'd like to totally remove Ubuntu and want to install Windows:



                                                  How to Remove Ubuntu and Put Windows Back On








                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                  up vote
                                                  63
                                                  down vote













                                                  If your system is dual boot:



                                                  Link up the following:





                                                  • Boot sector repair



                                                    Boot-Repair




                                                  • grub stuff



                                                    Installing and Re-installing GRUB




                                                  • If you'd like to totally remove Ubuntu and want to install Windows:



                                                    How to Remove Ubuntu and Put Windows Back On








                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                    up vote
                                                    63
                                                    down vote










                                                    up vote
                                                    63
                                                    down vote









                                                    If your system is dual boot:



                                                    Link up the following:





                                                    • Boot sector repair



                                                      Boot-Repair




                                                    • grub stuff



                                                      Installing and Re-installing GRUB




                                                    • If you'd like to totally remove Ubuntu and want to install Windows:



                                                      How to Remove Ubuntu and Put Windows Back On








                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                    If your system is dual boot:



                                                    Link up the following:





                                                    • Boot sector repair



                                                      Boot-Repair




                                                    • grub stuff



                                                      Installing and Re-installing GRUB




                                                    • If you'd like to totally remove Ubuntu and want to install Windows:



                                                      How to Remove Ubuntu and Put Windows Back On









                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24


























                                                    community wiki





                                                    6 revs, 4 users 42%
                                                    Jorge Castro























                                                        up vote
                                                        60
                                                        down vote













                                                        If your graphics card is Nvidia, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press e; then,

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with no splash or nomodeset.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.


                                                        If your graphics card is ATI, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press "e"; then

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with radeon.modeset=0.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.






                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
                                                          – Piku
                                                          Mar 28 '16 at 10:14










                                                        • OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
                                                          – user1767754
                                                          Dec 5 '17 at 8:15















                                                        up vote
                                                        60
                                                        down vote













                                                        If your graphics card is Nvidia, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press e; then,

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with no splash or nomodeset.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.


                                                        If your graphics card is ATI, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press "e"; then

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with radeon.modeset=0.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.






                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
                                                          – Piku
                                                          Mar 28 '16 at 10:14










                                                        • OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
                                                          – user1767754
                                                          Dec 5 '17 at 8:15













                                                        up vote
                                                        60
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        60
                                                        down vote









                                                        If your graphics card is Nvidia, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press e; then,

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with no splash or nomodeset.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.


                                                        If your graphics card is ATI, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press "e"; then

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with radeon.modeset=0.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.






                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        If your graphics card is Nvidia, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press e; then,

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with no splash or nomodeset.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.


                                                        If your graphics card is ATI, follow these steps:




                                                        1. In the GRUB menu at startup, press "e"; then

                                                        2. Use the arrow keys to replace quiet splash with radeon.modeset=0.

                                                        3. Then press the Ctrl+x key combination to boot.







                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited May 26 '13 at 5:33









                                                        Kevin Bowen

                                                        14.2k145969




                                                        14.2k145969










                                                        answered Mar 8 '12 at 23:11









                                                        imparatorhan

                                                        60657




                                                        60657












                                                        • Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
                                                          – Piku
                                                          Mar 28 '16 at 10:14










                                                        • OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
                                                          – user1767754
                                                          Dec 5 '17 at 8:15


















                                                        • Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
                                                          – Piku
                                                          Mar 28 '16 at 10:14










                                                        • OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
                                                          – user1767754
                                                          Dec 5 '17 at 8:15
















                                                        Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
                                                        – Piku
                                                        Mar 28 '16 at 10:14




                                                        Adding "nomodeset" fixed the console boot problem with my Mac Mini which booted fine until the login prompt appeared, then the screen turned into a distorted mess.
                                                        – Piku
                                                        Mar 28 '16 at 10:14












                                                        OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
                                                        – user1767754
                                                        Dec 5 '17 at 8:15




                                                        OMG! That saved my life, i have the asus z-270 motherboard with a nvidia gtx 1080ti and was going crazy!!!
                                                        – user1767754
                                                        Dec 5 '17 at 8:15










                                                        up vote
                                                        41
                                                        down vote













                                                        Increase screen brightness



                                                        On certain laptops (like HP Pavilion), you may boot to a black screen due to low screen brightness.



                                                        Increase the brightness using key combination (this differs for every model. For example, FN+F7)






                                                        share|improve this answer



















                                                        • 1




                                                          OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
                                                          – Mukesh Chapagain
                                                          May 10 '13 at 2:37






                                                        • 3




                                                          Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
                                                          – sparebytes
                                                          Sep 5 '13 at 0:51










                                                        • Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
                                                          – capdragon
                                                          Apr 4 '14 at 2:21










                                                        • It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
                                                          – 0xc0de
                                                          Jun 17 '16 at 9:48















                                                        up vote
                                                        41
                                                        down vote













                                                        Increase screen brightness



                                                        On certain laptops (like HP Pavilion), you may boot to a black screen due to low screen brightness.



                                                        Increase the brightness using key combination (this differs for every model. For example, FN+F7)






                                                        share|improve this answer



















                                                        • 1




                                                          OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
                                                          – Mukesh Chapagain
                                                          May 10 '13 at 2:37






                                                        • 3




                                                          Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
                                                          – sparebytes
                                                          Sep 5 '13 at 0:51










                                                        • Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
                                                          – capdragon
                                                          Apr 4 '14 at 2:21










                                                        • It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
                                                          – 0xc0de
                                                          Jun 17 '16 at 9:48













                                                        up vote
                                                        41
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        41
                                                        down vote









                                                        Increase screen brightness



                                                        On certain laptops (like HP Pavilion), you may boot to a black screen due to low screen brightness.



                                                        Increase the brightness using key combination (this differs for every model. For example, FN+F7)






                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        Increase screen brightness



                                                        On certain laptops (like HP Pavilion), you may boot to a black screen due to low screen brightness.



                                                        Increase the brightness using key combination (this differs for every model. For example, FN+F7)







                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited Jun 2 at 17:45


























                                                        community wiki





                                                        3 revs, 3 users 56%
                                                        Registered User









                                                        • 1




                                                          OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
                                                          – Mukesh Chapagain
                                                          May 10 '13 at 2:37






                                                        • 3




                                                          Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
                                                          – sparebytes
                                                          Sep 5 '13 at 0:51










                                                        • Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
                                                          – capdragon
                                                          Apr 4 '14 at 2:21










                                                        • It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
                                                          – 0xc0de
                                                          Jun 17 '16 at 9:48














                                                        • 1




                                                          OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
                                                          – Mukesh Chapagain
                                                          May 10 '13 at 2:37






                                                        • 3




                                                          Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
                                                          – sparebytes
                                                          Sep 5 '13 at 0:51










                                                        • Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
                                                          – capdragon
                                                          Apr 4 '14 at 2:21










                                                        • It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
                                                          – 0xc0de
                                                          Jun 17 '16 at 9:48








                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
                                                        – Mukesh Chapagain
                                                        May 10 '13 at 2:37




                                                        OMG! What a relief! Thanks for the answer. It was really a silly problem. I spent hours in searching for the solution and found it here. It was just to increase screen brightness. In my case it's 'Fn + F8'.
                                                        – Mukesh Chapagain
                                                        May 10 '13 at 2:37




                                                        3




                                                        3




                                                        Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
                                                        – sparebytes
                                                        Sep 5 '13 at 0:51




                                                        Confirmed on Dell XPS 12. Thanks you! I would have never suspected that.
                                                        – sparebytes
                                                        Sep 5 '13 at 0:51












                                                        Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
                                                        – capdragon
                                                        Apr 4 '14 at 2:21




                                                        Confirmed on Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro.
                                                        – capdragon
                                                        Apr 4 '14 at 2:21












                                                        It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
                                                        – 0xc0de
                                                        Jun 17 '16 at 9:48




                                                        It's actually funny (considering what people feel after knowing this was the problem causing a black screen).
                                                        – 0xc0de
                                                        Jun 17 '16 at 9:48










                                                        up vote
                                                        33
                                                        down vote













                                                        It appears as we both share the same hardware. At least the same CPU, The same P67 and the same video card (Mine is a GT 440). What you can do is the following:




                                                        1. When booting press the ESC Key or leave the SHIFT key pressed until the GRUB menu appears.



                                                        2. In the GRUB menu select the RECOVERY MODE. It should say something like:



                                                          Ubuntu, with Linux 3.2.0-25-generic-pae (recovery mode)




                                                        3. After the recovery mode finishes loading, it should present you with a menu. Select the option about going to the shell with root access (root Option. Last option in the image below)



                                                          enter image description here




                                                        4. Now we need to install the Nvidia drivers and update the system. Follow the next lines step by step to do this in the correct order. Also make sure you are connected to the Internet:



                                                          A. Updating System





                                                          1. sudo apt-get update

                                                          2. sudo apt-get upgrade


                                                          B. Nvidia Drivers



                                                          There are 2 ways to install the Proprietary Drivers. the PPA Way or the Default Ubuntu way.




                                                          1. The Default Ubuntu Way involves just typing in the terminal sudo apt-get install nvidia-current (For the current normal drivers) or sudo apt-get install nvidia-current-updates (For the latest current drivers). Just pick one.



                                                          2. the PPA way has the Latest bleeding bloody edge drivers. I mention this one since I am testing it in some use cases that relate to problems using TVs and 16:9/16:10 resolutions. To install this one do this:



                                                            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa and press ENTER to accept a message you will receive. Then do sudo apt-get update. Lastly do sudo apt-get install nvidia-375. Note that you can not mix this one with the Ubuntu way. One will overwrite the other one.





                                                        5. Reboot sudo reboot



                                                        Now if you happen to have any problems do the following via the terminal again but this time go to your home folder. In my case it is /home/cyrex, so I would cd /home/cyrex. In your case you should change that to your user and the apply the following:



                                                        sudo rm -fr ./config/monitors.xml
                                                        sudo rm -fr .nv*
                                                        sudo rm -fr /etc/X11/xorg.conf


                                                        Then when you boot into Ubuntu change the resolution via the Displays option in the Ubuntu Settings Menu (The cog in the upper right corner)



                                                        What we did there was remove the monitors.xml to solve some resolution problems, remove the .nvidia-settings to fix some Nvidia config problems and remove the xorg.conf (Which is not really needed in the latest Ubuntu versions) to remove any badly configured options.



                                                        Lastly we can execute the grub option in the recovery menu to fix any bootloader issues.






                                                        share|improve this answer



















                                                        • 1




                                                          Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
                                                          – kelvinilla
                                                          Jul 31 '14 at 17:37










                                                        • Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 13:51










                                                        • @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
                                                          – Luis Alvarado
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:49






                                                        • 1




                                                          @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:51










                                                        • Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
                                                          – Saurabh Singh
                                                          Aug 4 at 17:05

















                                                        up vote
                                                        33
                                                        down vote













                                                        It appears as we both share the same hardware. At least the same CPU, The same P67 and the same video card (Mine is a GT 440). What you can do is the following:




                                                        1. When booting press the ESC Key or leave the SHIFT key pressed until the GRUB menu appears.



                                                        2. In the GRUB menu select the RECOVERY MODE. It should say something like:



                                                          Ubuntu, with Linux 3.2.0-25-generic-pae (recovery mode)




                                                        3. After the recovery mode finishes loading, it should present you with a menu. Select the option about going to the shell with root access (root Option. Last option in the image below)



                                                          enter image description here




                                                        4. Now we need to install the Nvidia drivers and update the system. Follow the next lines step by step to do this in the correct order. Also make sure you are connected to the Internet:



                                                          A. Updating System





                                                          1. sudo apt-get update

                                                          2. sudo apt-get upgrade


                                                          B. Nvidia Drivers



                                                          There are 2 ways to install the Proprietary Drivers. the PPA Way or the Default Ubuntu way.




                                                          1. The Default Ubuntu Way involves just typing in the terminal sudo apt-get install nvidia-current (For the current normal drivers) or sudo apt-get install nvidia-current-updates (For the latest current drivers). Just pick one.



                                                          2. the PPA way has the Latest bleeding bloody edge drivers. I mention this one since I am testing it in some use cases that relate to problems using TVs and 16:9/16:10 resolutions. To install this one do this:



                                                            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa and press ENTER to accept a message you will receive. Then do sudo apt-get update. Lastly do sudo apt-get install nvidia-375. Note that you can not mix this one with the Ubuntu way. One will overwrite the other one.





                                                        5. Reboot sudo reboot



                                                        Now if you happen to have any problems do the following via the terminal again but this time go to your home folder. In my case it is /home/cyrex, so I would cd /home/cyrex. In your case you should change that to your user and the apply the following:



                                                        sudo rm -fr ./config/monitors.xml
                                                        sudo rm -fr .nv*
                                                        sudo rm -fr /etc/X11/xorg.conf


                                                        Then when you boot into Ubuntu change the resolution via the Displays option in the Ubuntu Settings Menu (The cog in the upper right corner)



                                                        What we did there was remove the monitors.xml to solve some resolution problems, remove the .nvidia-settings to fix some Nvidia config problems and remove the xorg.conf (Which is not really needed in the latest Ubuntu versions) to remove any badly configured options.



                                                        Lastly we can execute the grub option in the recovery menu to fix any bootloader issues.






                                                        share|improve this answer



















                                                        • 1




                                                          Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
                                                          – kelvinilla
                                                          Jul 31 '14 at 17:37










                                                        • Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 13:51










                                                        • @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
                                                          – Luis Alvarado
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:49






                                                        • 1




                                                          @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:51










                                                        • Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
                                                          – Saurabh Singh
                                                          Aug 4 at 17:05















                                                        up vote
                                                        33
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        33
                                                        down vote









                                                        It appears as we both share the same hardware. At least the same CPU, The same P67 and the same video card (Mine is a GT 440). What you can do is the following:




                                                        1. When booting press the ESC Key or leave the SHIFT key pressed until the GRUB menu appears.



                                                        2. In the GRUB menu select the RECOVERY MODE. It should say something like:



                                                          Ubuntu, with Linux 3.2.0-25-generic-pae (recovery mode)




                                                        3. After the recovery mode finishes loading, it should present you with a menu. Select the option about going to the shell with root access (root Option. Last option in the image below)



                                                          enter image description here




                                                        4. Now we need to install the Nvidia drivers and update the system. Follow the next lines step by step to do this in the correct order. Also make sure you are connected to the Internet:



                                                          A. Updating System





                                                          1. sudo apt-get update

                                                          2. sudo apt-get upgrade


                                                          B. Nvidia Drivers



                                                          There are 2 ways to install the Proprietary Drivers. the PPA Way or the Default Ubuntu way.




                                                          1. The Default Ubuntu Way involves just typing in the terminal sudo apt-get install nvidia-current (For the current normal drivers) or sudo apt-get install nvidia-current-updates (For the latest current drivers). Just pick one.



                                                          2. the PPA way has the Latest bleeding bloody edge drivers. I mention this one since I am testing it in some use cases that relate to problems using TVs and 16:9/16:10 resolutions. To install this one do this:



                                                            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa and press ENTER to accept a message you will receive. Then do sudo apt-get update. Lastly do sudo apt-get install nvidia-375. Note that you can not mix this one with the Ubuntu way. One will overwrite the other one.





                                                        5. Reboot sudo reboot



                                                        Now if you happen to have any problems do the following via the terminal again but this time go to your home folder. In my case it is /home/cyrex, so I would cd /home/cyrex. In your case you should change that to your user and the apply the following:



                                                        sudo rm -fr ./config/monitors.xml
                                                        sudo rm -fr .nv*
                                                        sudo rm -fr /etc/X11/xorg.conf


                                                        Then when you boot into Ubuntu change the resolution via the Displays option in the Ubuntu Settings Menu (The cog in the upper right corner)



                                                        What we did there was remove the monitors.xml to solve some resolution problems, remove the .nvidia-settings to fix some Nvidia config problems and remove the xorg.conf (Which is not really needed in the latest Ubuntu versions) to remove any badly configured options.



                                                        Lastly we can execute the grub option in the recovery menu to fix any bootloader issues.






                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        It appears as we both share the same hardware. At least the same CPU, The same P67 and the same video card (Mine is a GT 440). What you can do is the following:




                                                        1. When booting press the ESC Key or leave the SHIFT key pressed until the GRUB menu appears.



                                                        2. In the GRUB menu select the RECOVERY MODE. It should say something like:



                                                          Ubuntu, with Linux 3.2.0-25-generic-pae (recovery mode)




                                                        3. After the recovery mode finishes loading, it should present you with a menu. Select the option about going to the shell with root access (root Option. Last option in the image below)



                                                          enter image description here




                                                        4. Now we need to install the Nvidia drivers and update the system. Follow the next lines step by step to do this in the correct order. Also make sure you are connected to the Internet:



                                                          A. Updating System





                                                          1. sudo apt-get update

                                                          2. sudo apt-get upgrade


                                                          B. Nvidia Drivers



                                                          There are 2 ways to install the Proprietary Drivers. the PPA Way or the Default Ubuntu way.




                                                          1. The Default Ubuntu Way involves just typing in the terminal sudo apt-get install nvidia-current (For the current normal drivers) or sudo apt-get install nvidia-current-updates (For the latest current drivers). Just pick one.



                                                          2. the PPA way has the Latest bleeding bloody edge drivers. I mention this one since I am testing it in some use cases that relate to problems using TVs and 16:9/16:10 resolutions. To install this one do this:



                                                            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:graphics-drivers/ppa and press ENTER to accept a message you will receive. Then do sudo apt-get update. Lastly do sudo apt-get install nvidia-375. Note that you can not mix this one with the Ubuntu way. One will overwrite the other one.





                                                        5. Reboot sudo reboot



                                                        Now if you happen to have any problems do the following via the terminal again but this time go to your home folder. In my case it is /home/cyrex, so I would cd /home/cyrex. In your case you should change that to your user and the apply the following:



                                                        sudo rm -fr ./config/monitors.xml
                                                        sudo rm -fr .nv*
                                                        sudo rm -fr /etc/X11/xorg.conf


                                                        Then when you boot into Ubuntu change the resolution via the Displays option in the Ubuntu Settings Menu (The cog in the upper right corner)



                                                        What we did there was remove the monitors.xml to solve some resolution problems, remove the .nvidia-settings to fix some Nvidia config problems and remove the xorg.conf (Which is not really needed in the latest Ubuntu versions) to remove any badly configured options.



                                                        Lastly we can execute the grub option in the recovery menu to fix any bootloader issues.







                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited Dec 4 '16 at 21:24









                                                        user613307

                                                        63113




                                                        63113










                                                        answered May 27 '12 at 0:08









                                                        Luis Alvarado

                                                        144k135484649




                                                        144k135484649








                                                        • 1




                                                          Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
                                                          – kelvinilla
                                                          Jul 31 '14 at 17:37










                                                        • Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 13:51










                                                        • @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
                                                          – Luis Alvarado
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:49






                                                        • 1




                                                          @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:51










                                                        • Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
                                                          – Saurabh Singh
                                                          Aug 4 at 17:05
















                                                        • 1




                                                          Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
                                                          – kelvinilla
                                                          Jul 31 '14 at 17:37










                                                        • Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 13:51










                                                        • @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
                                                          – Luis Alvarado
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:49






                                                        • 1




                                                          @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
                                                          – AlvaroAV
                                                          Dec 5 '14 at 15:51










                                                        • Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
                                                          – Saurabh Singh
                                                          Aug 4 at 17:05










                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
                                                        – kelvinilla
                                                        Jul 31 '14 at 17:37




                                                        Thanks! Mine had been booting into a black screen. I didn't follow most of what's here, but I found a way to enter recovery mode since the shift method didn't work for me. In the end, the fix was a grub update in recovery mode.
                                                        – kelvinilla
                                                        Jul 31 '14 at 17:37












                                                        Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
                                                        – AlvaroAV
                                                        Dec 5 '14 at 13:51




                                                        Any idea why I'm getting also the black screen with cursor when trying to boot from recovery mode ?
                                                        – AlvaroAV
                                                        Dec 5 '14 at 13:51












                                                        @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
                                                        – Luis Alvarado
                                                        Dec 5 '14 at 15:49




                                                        @Liarez would be awesome if you could create a question about, mentioning you already read this answer. Also include your hardware.
                                                        – Luis Alvarado
                                                        Dec 5 '14 at 15:49




                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
                                                        – AlvaroAV
                                                        Dec 5 '14 at 15:51




                                                        @LuisAlvarado I've created it this morning Here. Could you take a look ? Gracias!
                                                        – AlvaroAV
                                                        Dec 5 '14 at 15:51












                                                        Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
                                                        – Saurabh Singh
                                                        Aug 4 at 17:05






                                                        Thanks a lot, you saved my day! This way worked finally!!
                                                        – Saurabh Singh
                                                        Aug 4 at 17:05












                                                        up vote
                                                        30
                                                        down vote













                                                        I had this problem last night. All of a sudden my system wouldn't boot up anymore. BIOS check would finish, then it would just hang there on a black screen with the cursor flashing. Left it there for several hours just in case. When that didn't work, I unplugged all my USB devices and all of a sudden it booted up fine again. I haven't narrowed it down exactly, but in my case it was either my USB hub or the iPod plugged into that USB hub that was causing it to hang.



                                                        Not saying this is necessarily the problem you're having, but hope your boot problem is as easy to fix as unplugging some USB devices...!






                                                        share|improve this answer





















                                                        • I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
                                                          – emf
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 6:21










                                                        • The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
                                                          – Doughy
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 15:49










                                                        • I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
                                                          – JMCF125
                                                          Feb 12 '14 at 11:07










                                                        • This solution worked for me.
                                                          – Omar Tariq
                                                          Jan 23 at 18:42















                                                        up vote
                                                        30
                                                        down vote













                                                        I had this problem last night. All of a sudden my system wouldn't boot up anymore. BIOS check would finish, then it would just hang there on a black screen with the cursor flashing. Left it there for several hours just in case. When that didn't work, I unplugged all my USB devices and all of a sudden it booted up fine again. I haven't narrowed it down exactly, but in my case it was either my USB hub or the iPod plugged into that USB hub that was causing it to hang.



                                                        Not saying this is necessarily the problem you're having, but hope your boot problem is as easy to fix as unplugging some USB devices...!






                                                        share|improve this answer





















                                                        • I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
                                                          – emf
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 6:21










                                                        • The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
                                                          – Doughy
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 15:49










                                                        • I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
                                                          – JMCF125
                                                          Feb 12 '14 at 11:07










                                                        • This solution worked for me.
                                                          – Omar Tariq
                                                          Jan 23 at 18:42













                                                        up vote
                                                        30
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        30
                                                        down vote









                                                        I had this problem last night. All of a sudden my system wouldn't boot up anymore. BIOS check would finish, then it would just hang there on a black screen with the cursor flashing. Left it there for several hours just in case. When that didn't work, I unplugged all my USB devices and all of a sudden it booted up fine again. I haven't narrowed it down exactly, but in my case it was either my USB hub or the iPod plugged into that USB hub that was causing it to hang.



                                                        Not saying this is necessarily the problem you're having, but hope your boot problem is as easy to fix as unplugging some USB devices...!






                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        I had this problem last night. All of a sudden my system wouldn't boot up anymore. BIOS check would finish, then it would just hang there on a black screen with the cursor flashing. Left it there for several hours just in case. When that didn't work, I unplugged all my USB devices and all of a sudden it booted up fine again. I haven't narrowed it down exactly, but in my case it was either my USB hub or the iPod plugged into that USB hub that was causing it to hang.



                                                        Not saying this is necessarily the problem you're having, but hope your boot problem is as easy to fix as unplugging some USB devices...!







                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                        answered Oct 13 '10 at 6:20









                                                        Stéphane

                                                        1,39221227




                                                        1,39221227












                                                        • I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
                                                          – emf
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 6:21










                                                        • The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
                                                          – Doughy
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 15:49










                                                        • I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
                                                          – JMCF125
                                                          Feb 12 '14 at 11:07










                                                        • This solution worked for me.
                                                          – Omar Tariq
                                                          Jan 23 at 18:42


















                                                        • I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
                                                          – emf
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 6:21










                                                        • The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
                                                          – Doughy
                                                          Oct 13 '10 at 15:49










                                                        • I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
                                                          – JMCF125
                                                          Feb 12 '14 at 11:07










                                                        • This solution worked for me.
                                                          – Omar Tariq
                                                          Jan 23 at 18:42
















                                                        I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
                                                        – emf
                                                        Oct 13 '10 at 6:21




                                                        I have had this mystery solution as well. I think it was looking for a boot partition from some USB devices and it wasn't finding it, or was trying to read and getting hung.
                                                        – emf
                                                        Oct 13 '10 at 6:21












                                                        The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
                                                        – Doughy
                                                        Oct 13 '10 at 15:49




                                                        The only thing I had plugged into a USB port was my mouse. I tried your solution, but unfortunately had no luck.
                                                        – Doughy
                                                        Oct 13 '10 at 15:49












                                                        I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
                                                        – JMCF125
                                                        Feb 12 '14 at 11:07




                                                        I remember this solution from Windows: I suspect your computer might have been trying to boot from one of those USB devices, and didn't do anything because they couldn't really boot. Changing the boot order in BIOS might allow you to boot normally with USB devices anyway.
                                                        – JMCF125
                                                        Feb 12 '14 at 11:07












                                                        This solution worked for me.
                                                        – Omar Tariq
                                                        Jan 23 at 18:42




                                                        This solution worked for me.
                                                        – Omar Tariq
                                                        Jan 23 at 18:42










                                                        up vote
                                                        24
                                                        down vote













                                                        If you are using the Windows Installer (Wubi)



                                                        Wubi overrides are identical to normal installs except the first time you reboot after running the installer in Windows.



                                                        To complicate things, since Ubuntu 11.10 there are two distinct methods to install with Wubi. The first way is using the Desktop ISO, which applies to all sub-flavours (Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Mythbuntu etc.) and also if you downloaded the Ubuntu ISO yourself.



                                                        The second method is using a pre-installed disk-image, if you run wubi.exe standalone and choose to install Ubuntu.



                                                        Method 1



                                                        You'll see this:



                                                        Completing the Ubuntu installation
                                                        For more installation options, press ESC now 5...4...3...2...1


                                                        Press Esc and then you see this:



                                                        Normal mode
                                                        Safe graphic mode
                                                        ACPI workarounds
                                                        Verbose mode
                                                        Demo mode


                                                        Ignore Safe graphic mode as it applied to Ubuntu in 2008 and does nothing for the modern nvidia/radeon issue. Place your cursor on Normal mode and press E. Then edit the entry and insert nomodeset as shown here (look for it between noprompt and quiet splash in the middle; note there may be some other differences but don't change anything else - just add nomodeset):



                                                        linux /ubuntu/install/boot/vmlinuz debian-installer/custom-installation=/ubuntu/install/custom-installation 
                                                        iso-scan/filename=/ubuntu/install/installation.iso
                                                        automatic-ubiquity noprompt nomodeset quiet splash boot=casper ro debian-installer/locale=en_US.UTF-8
                                                        console-setup/layoutcode=us console-setup/variantcode= -- rootflags-syncio
                                                        initrd /ubuntu/install/boot/initrd.lz


                                                        Now press Ctrl+X to boot.



                                                        NOTE: This only applies to the Installation; the next time you boot you have to override it again, and for this it will be the same as for a normal install (answered above). Make sure you hold Shift to make the Grub menu show though.



                                                        Method 2
                                                        When you run wubi.exe standalone and install Ubuntu (not a sub-flavour), it downloads a pre-installed, compressed disk image with a default Ubuntu install, and then decompresses this to the size of the virtual disk. There is no grub.cfg setup yet so it uses the file ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg for the first boot which you can edit and add nomodeset:



                                                        loopback loop0 /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                        set root=(loop0)
                                                        search --set=diskroot -f -n /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                        probe --set=diskuuid -u $diskroot
                                                        linux /vmlinuz root=UUID=$diskuuid loop=/ubuntu/disks/root.disk preseed/file=/ubuntu/install/preseed.cfg wubi-diskimage ro quiet splash nomodeset
                                                        initrd /initrd.img
                                                        boot


                                                        Note - if you've come to this thread after booting for the first time, it's possible that the grub.cfg has already been created (even if it froze up). In this case, editing the ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg file will do nothing - it always checks for /boot/grub/grub.cfg inside the virtual disk first. So you should follow the instructions for the normal install above.



                                                        Note also that the Grub Menu is suppressed by default on Wubi installs (even though there are two operating systems - because you boot Ubuntu from Windows, and therefore adding a Windows entry from Ubuntu's Grub Menu makes no sense) so you have to press and hold the Shift key after selecting Ubuntu in order to display the Grub Menu. On Windows 8, it reboots after you elect to boot into Wubi, in which case, you should hold the Shift key after the BIOS posts.
                                                        (This is only for Windows 8 with BIOS - Wubi doesn't work with UEFI).






                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                          up vote
                                                          24
                                                          down vote













                                                          If you are using the Windows Installer (Wubi)



                                                          Wubi overrides are identical to normal installs except the first time you reboot after running the installer in Windows.



                                                          To complicate things, since Ubuntu 11.10 there are two distinct methods to install with Wubi. The first way is using the Desktop ISO, which applies to all sub-flavours (Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Mythbuntu etc.) and also if you downloaded the Ubuntu ISO yourself.



                                                          The second method is using a pre-installed disk-image, if you run wubi.exe standalone and choose to install Ubuntu.



                                                          Method 1



                                                          You'll see this:



                                                          Completing the Ubuntu installation
                                                          For more installation options, press ESC now 5...4...3...2...1


                                                          Press Esc and then you see this:



                                                          Normal mode
                                                          Safe graphic mode
                                                          ACPI workarounds
                                                          Verbose mode
                                                          Demo mode


                                                          Ignore Safe graphic mode as it applied to Ubuntu in 2008 and does nothing for the modern nvidia/radeon issue. Place your cursor on Normal mode and press E. Then edit the entry and insert nomodeset as shown here (look for it between noprompt and quiet splash in the middle; note there may be some other differences but don't change anything else - just add nomodeset):



                                                          linux /ubuntu/install/boot/vmlinuz debian-installer/custom-installation=/ubuntu/install/custom-installation 
                                                          iso-scan/filename=/ubuntu/install/installation.iso
                                                          automatic-ubiquity noprompt nomodeset quiet splash boot=casper ro debian-installer/locale=en_US.UTF-8
                                                          console-setup/layoutcode=us console-setup/variantcode= -- rootflags-syncio
                                                          initrd /ubuntu/install/boot/initrd.lz


                                                          Now press Ctrl+X to boot.



                                                          NOTE: This only applies to the Installation; the next time you boot you have to override it again, and for this it will be the same as for a normal install (answered above). Make sure you hold Shift to make the Grub menu show though.



                                                          Method 2
                                                          When you run wubi.exe standalone and install Ubuntu (not a sub-flavour), it downloads a pre-installed, compressed disk image with a default Ubuntu install, and then decompresses this to the size of the virtual disk. There is no grub.cfg setup yet so it uses the file ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg for the first boot which you can edit and add nomodeset:



                                                          loopback loop0 /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                          set root=(loop0)
                                                          search --set=diskroot -f -n /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                          probe --set=diskuuid -u $diskroot
                                                          linux /vmlinuz root=UUID=$diskuuid loop=/ubuntu/disks/root.disk preseed/file=/ubuntu/install/preseed.cfg wubi-diskimage ro quiet splash nomodeset
                                                          initrd /initrd.img
                                                          boot


                                                          Note - if you've come to this thread after booting for the first time, it's possible that the grub.cfg has already been created (even if it froze up). In this case, editing the ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg file will do nothing - it always checks for /boot/grub/grub.cfg inside the virtual disk first. So you should follow the instructions for the normal install above.



                                                          Note also that the Grub Menu is suppressed by default on Wubi installs (even though there are two operating systems - because you boot Ubuntu from Windows, and therefore adding a Windows entry from Ubuntu's Grub Menu makes no sense) so you have to press and hold the Shift key after selecting Ubuntu in order to display the Grub Menu. On Windows 8, it reboots after you elect to boot into Wubi, in which case, you should hold the Shift key after the BIOS posts.
                                                          (This is only for Windows 8 with BIOS - Wubi doesn't work with UEFI).






                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                            up vote
                                                            24
                                                            down vote










                                                            up vote
                                                            24
                                                            down vote









                                                            If you are using the Windows Installer (Wubi)



                                                            Wubi overrides are identical to normal installs except the first time you reboot after running the installer in Windows.



                                                            To complicate things, since Ubuntu 11.10 there are two distinct methods to install with Wubi. The first way is using the Desktop ISO, which applies to all sub-flavours (Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Mythbuntu etc.) and also if you downloaded the Ubuntu ISO yourself.



                                                            The second method is using a pre-installed disk-image, if you run wubi.exe standalone and choose to install Ubuntu.



                                                            Method 1



                                                            You'll see this:



                                                            Completing the Ubuntu installation
                                                            For more installation options, press ESC now 5...4...3...2...1


                                                            Press Esc and then you see this:



                                                            Normal mode
                                                            Safe graphic mode
                                                            ACPI workarounds
                                                            Verbose mode
                                                            Demo mode


                                                            Ignore Safe graphic mode as it applied to Ubuntu in 2008 and does nothing for the modern nvidia/radeon issue. Place your cursor on Normal mode and press E. Then edit the entry and insert nomodeset as shown here (look for it between noprompt and quiet splash in the middle; note there may be some other differences but don't change anything else - just add nomodeset):



                                                            linux /ubuntu/install/boot/vmlinuz debian-installer/custom-installation=/ubuntu/install/custom-installation 
                                                            iso-scan/filename=/ubuntu/install/installation.iso
                                                            automatic-ubiquity noprompt nomodeset quiet splash boot=casper ro debian-installer/locale=en_US.UTF-8
                                                            console-setup/layoutcode=us console-setup/variantcode= -- rootflags-syncio
                                                            initrd /ubuntu/install/boot/initrd.lz


                                                            Now press Ctrl+X to boot.



                                                            NOTE: This only applies to the Installation; the next time you boot you have to override it again, and for this it will be the same as for a normal install (answered above). Make sure you hold Shift to make the Grub menu show though.



                                                            Method 2
                                                            When you run wubi.exe standalone and install Ubuntu (not a sub-flavour), it downloads a pre-installed, compressed disk image with a default Ubuntu install, and then decompresses this to the size of the virtual disk. There is no grub.cfg setup yet so it uses the file ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg for the first boot which you can edit and add nomodeset:



                                                            loopback loop0 /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                            set root=(loop0)
                                                            search --set=diskroot -f -n /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                            probe --set=diskuuid -u $diskroot
                                                            linux /vmlinuz root=UUID=$diskuuid loop=/ubuntu/disks/root.disk preseed/file=/ubuntu/install/preseed.cfg wubi-diskimage ro quiet splash nomodeset
                                                            initrd /initrd.img
                                                            boot


                                                            Note - if you've come to this thread after booting for the first time, it's possible that the grub.cfg has already been created (even if it froze up). In this case, editing the ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg file will do nothing - it always checks for /boot/grub/grub.cfg inside the virtual disk first. So you should follow the instructions for the normal install above.



                                                            Note also that the Grub Menu is suppressed by default on Wubi installs (even though there are two operating systems - because you boot Ubuntu from Windows, and therefore adding a Windows entry from Ubuntu's Grub Menu makes no sense) so you have to press and hold the Shift key after selecting Ubuntu in order to display the Grub Menu. On Windows 8, it reboots after you elect to boot into Wubi, in which case, you should hold the Shift key after the BIOS posts.
                                                            (This is only for Windows 8 with BIOS - Wubi doesn't work with UEFI).






                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                            If you are using the Windows Installer (Wubi)



                                                            Wubi overrides are identical to normal installs except the first time you reboot after running the installer in Windows.



                                                            To complicate things, since Ubuntu 11.10 there are two distinct methods to install with Wubi. The first way is using the Desktop ISO, which applies to all sub-flavours (Kubuntu, Lubuntu, Mythbuntu etc.) and also if you downloaded the Ubuntu ISO yourself.



                                                            The second method is using a pre-installed disk-image, if you run wubi.exe standalone and choose to install Ubuntu.



                                                            Method 1



                                                            You'll see this:



                                                            Completing the Ubuntu installation
                                                            For more installation options, press ESC now 5...4...3...2...1


                                                            Press Esc and then you see this:



                                                            Normal mode
                                                            Safe graphic mode
                                                            ACPI workarounds
                                                            Verbose mode
                                                            Demo mode


                                                            Ignore Safe graphic mode as it applied to Ubuntu in 2008 and does nothing for the modern nvidia/radeon issue. Place your cursor on Normal mode and press E. Then edit the entry and insert nomodeset as shown here (look for it between noprompt and quiet splash in the middle; note there may be some other differences but don't change anything else - just add nomodeset):



                                                            linux /ubuntu/install/boot/vmlinuz debian-installer/custom-installation=/ubuntu/install/custom-installation 
                                                            iso-scan/filename=/ubuntu/install/installation.iso
                                                            automatic-ubiquity noprompt nomodeset quiet splash boot=casper ro debian-installer/locale=en_US.UTF-8
                                                            console-setup/layoutcode=us console-setup/variantcode= -- rootflags-syncio
                                                            initrd /ubuntu/install/boot/initrd.lz


                                                            Now press Ctrl+X to boot.



                                                            NOTE: This only applies to the Installation; the next time you boot you have to override it again, and for this it will be the same as for a normal install (answered above). Make sure you hold Shift to make the Grub menu show though.



                                                            Method 2
                                                            When you run wubi.exe standalone and install Ubuntu (not a sub-flavour), it downloads a pre-installed, compressed disk image with a default Ubuntu install, and then decompresses this to the size of the virtual disk. There is no grub.cfg setup yet so it uses the file ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg for the first boot which you can edit and add nomodeset:



                                                            loopback loop0 /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                            set root=(loop0)
                                                            search --set=diskroot -f -n /ubuntu/disks/root.disk
                                                            probe --set=diskuuid -u $diskroot
                                                            linux /vmlinuz root=UUID=$diskuuid loop=/ubuntu/disks/root.disk preseed/file=/ubuntu/install/preseed.cfg wubi-diskimage ro quiet splash nomodeset
                                                            initrd /initrd.img
                                                            boot


                                                            Note - if you've come to this thread after booting for the first time, it's possible that the grub.cfg has already been created (even if it froze up). In this case, editing the ubuntuinstallwubildr-disk.cfg file will do nothing - it always checks for /boot/grub/grub.cfg inside the virtual disk first. So you should follow the instructions for the normal install above.



                                                            Note also that the Grub Menu is suppressed by default on Wubi installs (even though there are two operating systems - because you boot Ubuntu from Windows, and therefore adding a Windows entry from Ubuntu's Grub Menu makes no sense) so you have to press and hold the Shift key after selecting Ubuntu in order to display the Grub Menu. On Windows 8, it reboots after you elect to boot into Wubi, in which case, you should hold the Shift key after the BIOS posts.
                                                            (This is only for Windows 8 with BIOS - Wubi doesn't work with UEFI).







                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                            edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24


























                                                            community wiki





                                                            5 revs, 2 users 97%
                                                            bcbc























                                                                up vote
                                                                16
                                                                down vote













                                                                I also had this problem, or a similar one. It turned out that, for some reason, Ubuntu had started with the screen brightness on its lowest setting. If I went into a very dark room, I could see the screen just well enough to go to the "Brightness and Lock" control panel and turn the brightness up to where it should be.






                                                                share|improve this answer

























                                                                  up vote
                                                                  16
                                                                  down vote













                                                                  I also had this problem, or a similar one. It turned out that, for some reason, Ubuntu had started with the screen brightness on its lowest setting. If I went into a very dark room, I could see the screen just well enough to go to the "Brightness and Lock" control panel and turn the brightness up to where it should be.






                                                                  share|improve this answer























                                                                    up vote
                                                                    16
                                                                    down vote










                                                                    up vote
                                                                    16
                                                                    down vote









                                                                    I also had this problem, or a similar one. It turned out that, for some reason, Ubuntu had started with the screen brightness on its lowest setting. If I went into a very dark room, I could see the screen just well enough to go to the "Brightness and Lock" control panel and turn the brightness up to where it should be.






                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    I also had this problem, or a similar one. It turned out that, for some reason, Ubuntu had started with the screen brightness on its lowest setting. If I went into a very dark room, I could see the screen just well enough to go to the "Brightness and Lock" control panel and turn the brightness up to where it should be.







                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                    answered Apr 29 '12 at 18:54









                                                                    melanjolly

                                                                    1612




                                                                    1612






















                                                                        up vote
                                                                        15
                                                                        down vote













                                                                        how to fix :




                                                                        1. Start ubuntu, login, now in the blackscreen go to the console Ctrl+Alt+F1
                                                                          and type nautilus


                                                                        2. if nautilus cannot be opened in terminal type unity


                                                                        3. now without exiting or stoping the unity comand return to the ubuntu interface in my pc is Ctrl+Alt+F7

                                                                        4. open terminal in nautilus using Ctrl+Alt+T and type nautilus

                                                                        5. while nautilus still open, in terminal type sudo software-properties-gtk

                                                                        6. search for graphic drivers, my problem was the default drivers of X.org. I have an ati video card and I installed the drivers of fglrx-updates if you have nvidia install the drivers of nvidia or if you have ati driver

                                                                        7. reboot

                                                                        8. after login u will see nautilus running well and the wallpaper the only thing not working is unity. open terminal and type: dconf reset -f /org/compiz/ and setsid unity


                                                                        thats it.



                                                                        I hope this fix your problem.






                                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                                        • very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                                                                          – dschinn1001
                                                                          Jan 9 '16 at 5:25















                                                                        up vote
                                                                        15
                                                                        down vote













                                                                        how to fix :




                                                                        1. Start ubuntu, login, now in the blackscreen go to the console Ctrl+Alt+F1
                                                                          and type nautilus


                                                                        2. if nautilus cannot be opened in terminal type unity


                                                                        3. now without exiting or stoping the unity comand return to the ubuntu interface in my pc is Ctrl+Alt+F7

                                                                        4. open terminal in nautilus using Ctrl+Alt+T and type nautilus

                                                                        5. while nautilus still open, in terminal type sudo software-properties-gtk

                                                                        6. search for graphic drivers, my problem was the default drivers of X.org. I have an ati video card and I installed the drivers of fglrx-updates if you have nvidia install the drivers of nvidia or if you have ati driver

                                                                        7. reboot

                                                                        8. after login u will see nautilus running well and the wallpaper the only thing not working is unity. open terminal and type: dconf reset -f /org/compiz/ and setsid unity


                                                                        thats it.



                                                                        I hope this fix your problem.






                                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                                        • very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                                                                          – dschinn1001
                                                                          Jan 9 '16 at 5:25













                                                                        up vote
                                                                        15
                                                                        down vote










                                                                        up vote
                                                                        15
                                                                        down vote









                                                                        how to fix :




                                                                        1. Start ubuntu, login, now in the blackscreen go to the console Ctrl+Alt+F1
                                                                          and type nautilus


                                                                        2. if nautilus cannot be opened in terminal type unity


                                                                        3. now without exiting or stoping the unity comand return to the ubuntu interface in my pc is Ctrl+Alt+F7

                                                                        4. open terminal in nautilus using Ctrl+Alt+T and type nautilus

                                                                        5. while nautilus still open, in terminal type sudo software-properties-gtk

                                                                        6. search for graphic drivers, my problem was the default drivers of X.org. I have an ati video card and I installed the drivers of fglrx-updates if you have nvidia install the drivers of nvidia or if you have ati driver

                                                                        7. reboot

                                                                        8. after login u will see nautilus running well and the wallpaper the only thing not working is unity. open terminal and type: dconf reset -f /org/compiz/ and setsid unity


                                                                        thats it.



                                                                        I hope this fix your problem.






                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                        how to fix :




                                                                        1. Start ubuntu, login, now in the blackscreen go to the console Ctrl+Alt+F1
                                                                          and type nautilus


                                                                        2. if nautilus cannot be opened in terminal type unity


                                                                        3. now without exiting or stoping the unity comand return to the ubuntu interface in my pc is Ctrl+Alt+F7

                                                                        4. open terminal in nautilus using Ctrl+Alt+T and type nautilus

                                                                        5. while nautilus still open, in terminal type sudo software-properties-gtk

                                                                        6. search for graphic drivers, my problem was the default drivers of X.org. I have an ati video card and I installed the drivers of fglrx-updates if you have nvidia install the drivers of nvidia or if you have ati driver

                                                                        7. reboot

                                                                        8. after login u will see nautilus running well and the wallpaper the only thing not working is unity. open terminal and type: dconf reset -f /org/compiz/ and setsid unity


                                                                        thats it.



                                                                        I hope this fix your problem.







                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                                        edited Aug 9 '16 at 10:14









                                                                        Shashanth

                                                                        2611522




                                                                        2611522










                                                                        answered Oct 21 '13 at 18:07









                                                                        Erick David Ruiz Coronel

                                                                        33937




                                                                        33937












                                                                        • very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                                                                          – dschinn1001
                                                                          Jan 9 '16 at 5:25


















                                                                        • very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                                                                          – dschinn1001
                                                                          Jan 9 '16 at 5:25
















                                                                        very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                                                                        – dschinn1001
                                                                        Jan 9 '16 at 5:25




                                                                        very good answer, but not clear what is really a black screen in dual-boot mode ?! - When Windows is on first boot partition of harddisk then black screen is black at ransomware without ubuntu logo ?! - or not ?! - when recovery partition is deleted then for sure black like black cat in black tunnel while there should exist an ideology.
                                                                        – dschinn1001
                                                                        Jan 9 '16 at 5:25










                                                                        up vote
                                                                        14
                                                                        down vote













                                                                        I realize this is an old question, but it's also pretty general without any details about the specific hardware involved. That said, you can't file a bug or go about fixing things until you figure out some more details.



                                                                        I thought I'd take a stab at this since I faced the issue and recovered from it pretty recently. I'll probably run through here again later and throw in some more info and simplify the steps, but the answer list is already pretty big, so I'll go easy on the screenshots.



                                                                        Recovery mode is your friend, but you don't always need a single-user root session to solve things. In fact, you might just be able to do a normal console login by selecting "resume" without considering any of the other options on the recovery menu. The nice thing about a normal console session over the single-user root mode is that you can get multiple terminals running at once--Switch between them or open up new ones with Alt+F1, Alt+F2, etc. There's a good chance that it's a video driver issue which is preventing you from going into the graphical login, and it might just be a result of some upgrade you did before rebooting the computer.



                                                                        You might go a couple of years at a time without experiencing similar issues, but it's a good idea to know your hardware and to be prepared to use the terminal. Basically there are two video drivers to worry about: the kernel driver and the xorg driver. Xorg is a video server that uses the x11 protocol to display things in full color with depth and all kinds of crazy effects--It's an abstraction layer between applications like the desktop environment or windowing managers and the kernel driver. The kernel driver is yet another abstraction layer, but it's a bit closer to communicating with the actual hardware.



                                                                        It's the kernel's job (in this case, Linux) to pass messages between applications and the hardware. The drivers can either be compiled into the kernel or added in a more ad hoc way through kernel modules. Probably you're using modules unless you configured and compiled your own custom kernel. The kernel driver as a module gets loaded shortly after you boot up, which allows for easier upgrades when you power down to swap out a card. The good news is that there are some more or less standard tools that you can run from the command line to give you more information about those kinds of drivers, the actual hardware and whether they're loading: lspci, dmidecode and dmesg, to name a few. There are man pages (e.g., $man dmidecode) and many howtos on those kinds of tools, so I won't go into too much detail here for now.



                                                                        Then there are the xorg drivers. To list what's available in the repositories, you might type apt-cache search xserver-xorg-video | less to give you a list of all possible drivers. Piping it to less with the '|' symbol which you can probably type by tapping the slash key while holding down shift (to be clear on what symbol this is), gives you the option to scroll back and forth through the list of drivers (with the arrow keys). To get more info on a specific driver, you might type apt-cache show xserver-xorg-video-vesa (to pick one at random). To install one, you could type apt-get install xserver-xorg-video-vesa and hope for the best. As of I don't know how many versions ago Xorg will try to load one of the installed drivers for you automatically, but under certain conditions you might have a configuration file lingering around in /etc/X11 called xorg.conf. So take a look and see if there's one there: ls /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                                                                        If you upgraded an Xorg driver without directly upgrading Xorg itself, there's a chance that reverting to the old driver via apt-get install will not automatically pull in the version of Xorg that it's compatible with--It should but apt doesn't always do what it should. Minimally, you'll need a matching version of xserver-xorg-core. Don't bother with uninstalling the upgraded xorg replacement though, just enter the command apt-get install xserver-xorg-core to revert back and uninstall the newer version automatically. This advice applies mostly to transitional renamed packages which provide virtual packages to replace ones that are still being maintained in the same branch of the package tree. Virtual packages are sometimes a mess and can do funny things with any of a number of dependencies which are getting swapped around in the upgrade/downgrade process, but concentrate on getting back to the GUI first.



                                                                        Now that I've given an overview of some directions to start with troubleshooting, let's get back to the console screen that you hopefully pulled off without a hitch from choosing "resume" at the recovery menu. It's a pain to be stuck without a mouse at the console when you've got a lot of copying and pasting to do, so prepare yourself with some gpm for mouse support and some other tools: links/links2 or w3m (web browsers), vim (text editor), dpkg, apt, less (vim style keys and searching like man), and grep. I'm probably leaving a few out.



                                                                        Some particularly useful commands for dpkg are dpkg -L to show files for packages that are already installed and dpkg -l | less to show all packages which are currently installed (piped to less).Sometimes gpm is a little finicky about letting you select things, so you can restart it with /etc/init.d/gpm restart but you might have problems with clicking on links in a page before you restart w3m or the browser links. w3m is a little easier to scroll around and generally better for authenticated sessions (e.g., logging into forums for help). It takes a bit of getting used to hitting the Esc key to click on links (the hyperlinks) though, and the learning curve is a bit steeper than with the browser known as links.



                                                                        Unless you've got an Nvidia card or something with proprietary driver support for linux that you want to try, I'd shy away from kernel drivers before trying things with xorg--Try troubleshooting the xorg drivers first because it can be a lot easier than customizing a kernel for hardware (depending on the brand). The thing is that you might wind up following a series of links that lead you in the wrong direction, with chip makers sending you to the card makers and card makers giving you no support. As for trying out different kernels for different "vanilla" versions of the driver, stick with kernel versions that aren't far off from your current one (given by uname -r) unless you're really interested in testing. There's a pretty good chance that the latest mainstream kernel won't even boot up on your system, so why bother if you're stuck with a half-way broken setup? Keep focused on doing the bare minimum that it takes to get back up again so you're not falling behind on too much work. You can type things up in emacs, vim or pico/nano or check your email in mutt or pine, but eventually you'll want to come back to the 21st century.



                                                                        Good luck!






                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                          up vote
                                                                          14
                                                                          down vote













                                                                          I realize this is an old question, but it's also pretty general without any details about the specific hardware involved. That said, you can't file a bug or go about fixing things until you figure out some more details.



                                                                          I thought I'd take a stab at this since I faced the issue and recovered from it pretty recently. I'll probably run through here again later and throw in some more info and simplify the steps, but the answer list is already pretty big, so I'll go easy on the screenshots.



                                                                          Recovery mode is your friend, but you don't always need a single-user root session to solve things. In fact, you might just be able to do a normal console login by selecting "resume" without considering any of the other options on the recovery menu. The nice thing about a normal console session over the single-user root mode is that you can get multiple terminals running at once--Switch between them or open up new ones with Alt+F1, Alt+F2, etc. There's a good chance that it's a video driver issue which is preventing you from going into the graphical login, and it might just be a result of some upgrade you did before rebooting the computer.



                                                                          You might go a couple of years at a time without experiencing similar issues, but it's a good idea to know your hardware and to be prepared to use the terminal. Basically there are two video drivers to worry about: the kernel driver and the xorg driver. Xorg is a video server that uses the x11 protocol to display things in full color with depth and all kinds of crazy effects--It's an abstraction layer between applications like the desktop environment or windowing managers and the kernel driver. The kernel driver is yet another abstraction layer, but it's a bit closer to communicating with the actual hardware.



                                                                          It's the kernel's job (in this case, Linux) to pass messages between applications and the hardware. The drivers can either be compiled into the kernel or added in a more ad hoc way through kernel modules. Probably you're using modules unless you configured and compiled your own custom kernel. The kernel driver as a module gets loaded shortly after you boot up, which allows for easier upgrades when you power down to swap out a card. The good news is that there are some more or less standard tools that you can run from the command line to give you more information about those kinds of drivers, the actual hardware and whether they're loading: lspci, dmidecode and dmesg, to name a few. There are man pages (e.g., $man dmidecode) and many howtos on those kinds of tools, so I won't go into too much detail here for now.



                                                                          Then there are the xorg drivers. To list what's available in the repositories, you might type apt-cache search xserver-xorg-video | less to give you a list of all possible drivers. Piping it to less with the '|' symbol which you can probably type by tapping the slash key while holding down shift (to be clear on what symbol this is), gives you the option to scroll back and forth through the list of drivers (with the arrow keys). To get more info on a specific driver, you might type apt-cache show xserver-xorg-video-vesa (to pick one at random). To install one, you could type apt-get install xserver-xorg-video-vesa and hope for the best. As of I don't know how many versions ago Xorg will try to load one of the installed drivers for you automatically, but under certain conditions you might have a configuration file lingering around in /etc/X11 called xorg.conf. So take a look and see if there's one there: ls /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                                                                          If you upgraded an Xorg driver without directly upgrading Xorg itself, there's a chance that reverting to the old driver via apt-get install will not automatically pull in the version of Xorg that it's compatible with--It should but apt doesn't always do what it should. Minimally, you'll need a matching version of xserver-xorg-core. Don't bother with uninstalling the upgraded xorg replacement though, just enter the command apt-get install xserver-xorg-core to revert back and uninstall the newer version automatically. This advice applies mostly to transitional renamed packages which provide virtual packages to replace ones that are still being maintained in the same branch of the package tree. Virtual packages are sometimes a mess and can do funny things with any of a number of dependencies which are getting swapped around in the upgrade/downgrade process, but concentrate on getting back to the GUI first.



                                                                          Now that I've given an overview of some directions to start with troubleshooting, let's get back to the console screen that you hopefully pulled off without a hitch from choosing "resume" at the recovery menu. It's a pain to be stuck without a mouse at the console when you've got a lot of copying and pasting to do, so prepare yourself with some gpm for mouse support and some other tools: links/links2 or w3m (web browsers), vim (text editor), dpkg, apt, less (vim style keys and searching like man), and grep. I'm probably leaving a few out.



                                                                          Some particularly useful commands for dpkg are dpkg -L to show files for packages that are already installed and dpkg -l | less to show all packages which are currently installed (piped to less).Sometimes gpm is a little finicky about letting you select things, so you can restart it with /etc/init.d/gpm restart but you might have problems with clicking on links in a page before you restart w3m or the browser links. w3m is a little easier to scroll around and generally better for authenticated sessions (e.g., logging into forums for help). It takes a bit of getting used to hitting the Esc key to click on links (the hyperlinks) though, and the learning curve is a bit steeper than with the browser known as links.



                                                                          Unless you've got an Nvidia card or something with proprietary driver support for linux that you want to try, I'd shy away from kernel drivers before trying things with xorg--Try troubleshooting the xorg drivers first because it can be a lot easier than customizing a kernel for hardware (depending on the brand). The thing is that you might wind up following a series of links that lead you in the wrong direction, with chip makers sending you to the card makers and card makers giving you no support. As for trying out different kernels for different "vanilla" versions of the driver, stick with kernel versions that aren't far off from your current one (given by uname -r) unless you're really interested in testing. There's a pretty good chance that the latest mainstream kernel won't even boot up on your system, so why bother if you're stuck with a half-way broken setup? Keep focused on doing the bare minimum that it takes to get back up again so you're not falling behind on too much work. You can type things up in emacs, vim or pico/nano or check your email in mutt or pine, but eventually you'll want to come back to the 21st century.



                                                                          Good luck!






                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                            up vote
                                                                            14
                                                                            down vote










                                                                            up vote
                                                                            14
                                                                            down vote









                                                                            I realize this is an old question, but it's also pretty general without any details about the specific hardware involved. That said, you can't file a bug or go about fixing things until you figure out some more details.



                                                                            I thought I'd take a stab at this since I faced the issue and recovered from it pretty recently. I'll probably run through here again later and throw in some more info and simplify the steps, but the answer list is already pretty big, so I'll go easy on the screenshots.



                                                                            Recovery mode is your friend, but you don't always need a single-user root session to solve things. In fact, you might just be able to do a normal console login by selecting "resume" without considering any of the other options on the recovery menu. The nice thing about a normal console session over the single-user root mode is that you can get multiple terminals running at once--Switch between them or open up new ones with Alt+F1, Alt+F2, etc. There's a good chance that it's a video driver issue which is preventing you from going into the graphical login, and it might just be a result of some upgrade you did before rebooting the computer.



                                                                            You might go a couple of years at a time without experiencing similar issues, but it's a good idea to know your hardware and to be prepared to use the terminal. Basically there are two video drivers to worry about: the kernel driver and the xorg driver. Xorg is a video server that uses the x11 protocol to display things in full color with depth and all kinds of crazy effects--It's an abstraction layer between applications like the desktop environment or windowing managers and the kernel driver. The kernel driver is yet another abstraction layer, but it's a bit closer to communicating with the actual hardware.



                                                                            It's the kernel's job (in this case, Linux) to pass messages between applications and the hardware. The drivers can either be compiled into the kernel or added in a more ad hoc way through kernel modules. Probably you're using modules unless you configured and compiled your own custom kernel. The kernel driver as a module gets loaded shortly after you boot up, which allows for easier upgrades when you power down to swap out a card. The good news is that there are some more or less standard tools that you can run from the command line to give you more information about those kinds of drivers, the actual hardware and whether they're loading: lspci, dmidecode and dmesg, to name a few. There are man pages (e.g., $man dmidecode) and many howtos on those kinds of tools, so I won't go into too much detail here for now.



                                                                            Then there are the xorg drivers. To list what's available in the repositories, you might type apt-cache search xserver-xorg-video | less to give you a list of all possible drivers. Piping it to less with the '|' symbol which you can probably type by tapping the slash key while holding down shift (to be clear on what symbol this is), gives you the option to scroll back and forth through the list of drivers (with the arrow keys). To get more info on a specific driver, you might type apt-cache show xserver-xorg-video-vesa (to pick one at random). To install one, you could type apt-get install xserver-xorg-video-vesa and hope for the best. As of I don't know how many versions ago Xorg will try to load one of the installed drivers for you automatically, but under certain conditions you might have a configuration file lingering around in /etc/X11 called xorg.conf. So take a look and see if there's one there: ls /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                                                                            If you upgraded an Xorg driver without directly upgrading Xorg itself, there's a chance that reverting to the old driver via apt-get install will not automatically pull in the version of Xorg that it's compatible with--It should but apt doesn't always do what it should. Minimally, you'll need a matching version of xserver-xorg-core. Don't bother with uninstalling the upgraded xorg replacement though, just enter the command apt-get install xserver-xorg-core to revert back and uninstall the newer version automatically. This advice applies mostly to transitional renamed packages which provide virtual packages to replace ones that are still being maintained in the same branch of the package tree. Virtual packages are sometimes a mess and can do funny things with any of a number of dependencies which are getting swapped around in the upgrade/downgrade process, but concentrate on getting back to the GUI first.



                                                                            Now that I've given an overview of some directions to start with troubleshooting, let's get back to the console screen that you hopefully pulled off without a hitch from choosing "resume" at the recovery menu. It's a pain to be stuck without a mouse at the console when you've got a lot of copying and pasting to do, so prepare yourself with some gpm for mouse support and some other tools: links/links2 or w3m (web browsers), vim (text editor), dpkg, apt, less (vim style keys and searching like man), and grep. I'm probably leaving a few out.



                                                                            Some particularly useful commands for dpkg are dpkg -L to show files for packages that are already installed and dpkg -l | less to show all packages which are currently installed (piped to less).Sometimes gpm is a little finicky about letting you select things, so you can restart it with /etc/init.d/gpm restart but you might have problems with clicking on links in a page before you restart w3m or the browser links. w3m is a little easier to scroll around and generally better for authenticated sessions (e.g., logging into forums for help). It takes a bit of getting used to hitting the Esc key to click on links (the hyperlinks) though, and the learning curve is a bit steeper than with the browser known as links.



                                                                            Unless you've got an Nvidia card or something with proprietary driver support for linux that you want to try, I'd shy away from kernel drivers before trying things with xorg--Try troubleshooting the xorg drivers first because it can be a lot easier than customizing a kernel for hardware (depending on the brand). The thing is that you might wind up following a series of links that lead you in the wrong direction, with chip makers sending you to the card makers and card makers giving you no support. As for trying out different kernels for different "vanilla" versions of the driver, stick with kernel versions that aren't far off from your current one (given by uname -r) unless you're really interested in testing. There's a pretty good chance that the latest mainstream kernel won't even boot up on your system, so why bother if you're stuck with a half-way broken setup? Keep focused on doing the bare minimum that it takes to get back up again so you're not falling behind on too much work. You can type things up in emacs, vim or pico/nano or check your email in mutt or pine, but eventually you'll want to come back to the 21st century.



                                                                            Good luck!






                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                            I realize this is an old question, but it's also pretty general without any details about the specific hardware involved. That said, you can't file a bug or go about fixing things until you figure out some more details.



                                                                            I thought I'd take a stab at this since I faced the issue and recovered from it pretty recently. I'll probably run through here again later and throw in some more info and simplify the steps, but the answer list is already pretty big, so I'll go easy on the screenshots.



                                                                            Recovery mode is your friend, but you don't always need a single-user root session to solve things. In fact, you might just be able to do a normal console login by selecting "resume" without considering any of the other options on the recovery menu. The nice thing about a normal console session over the single-user root mode is that you can get multiple terminals running at once--Switch between them or open up new ones with Alt+F1, Alt+F2, etc. There's a good chance that it's a video driver issue which is preventing you from going into the graphical login, and it might just be a result of some upgrade you did before rebooting the computer.



                                                                            You might go a couple of years at a time without experiencing similar issues, but it's a good idea to know your hardware and to be prepared to use the terminal. Basically there are two video drivers to worry about: the kernel driver and the xorg driver. Xorg is a video server that uses the x11 protocol to display things in full color with depth and all kinds of crazy effects--It's an abstraction layer between applications like the desktop environment or windowing managers and the kernel driver. The kernel driver is yet another abstraction layer, but it's a bit closer to communicating with the actual hardware.



                                                                            It's the kernel's job (in this case, Linux) to pass messages between applications and the hardware. The drivers can either be compiled into the kernel or added in a more ad hoc way through kernel modules. Probably you're using modules unless you configured and compiled your own custom kernel. The kernel driver as a module gets loaded shortly after you boot up, which allows for easier upgrades when you power down to swap out a card. The good news is that there are some more or less standard tools that you can run from the command line to give you more information about those kinds of drivers, the actual hardware and whether they're loading: lspci, dmidecode and dmesg, to name a few. There are man pages (e.g., $man dmidecode) and many howtos on those kinds of tools, so I won't go into too much detail here for now.



                                                                            Then there are the xorg drivers. To list what's available in the repositories, you might type apt-cache search xserver-xorg-video | less to give you a list of all possible drivers. Piping it to less with the '|' symbol which you can probably type by tapping the slash key while holding down shift (to be clear on what symbol this is), gives you the option to scroll back and forth through the list of drivers (with the arrow keys). To get more info on a specific driver, you might type apt-cache show xserver-xorg-video-vesa (to pick one at random). To install one, you could type apt-get install xserver-xorg-video-vesa and hope for the best. As of I don't know how many versions ago Xorg will try to load one of the installed drivers for you automatically, but under certain conditions you might have a configuration file lingering around in /etc/X11 called xorg.conf. So take a look and see if there's one there: ls /etc/X11/xorg.conf



                                                                            If you upgraded an Xorg driver without directly upgrading Xorg itself, there's a chance that reverting to the old driver via apt-get install will not automatically pull in the version of Xorg that it's compatible with--It should but apt doesn't always do what it should. Minimally, you'll need a matching version of xserver-xorg-core. Don't bother with uninstalling the upgraded xorg replacement though, just enter the command apt-get install xserver-xorg-core to revert back and uninstall the newer version automatically. This advice applies mostly to transitional renamed packages which provide virtual packages to replace ones that are still being maintained in the same branch of the package tree. Virtual packages are sometimes a mess and can do funny things with any of a number of dependencies which are getting swapped around in the upgrade/downgrade process, but concentrate on getting back to the GUI first.



                                                                            Now that I've given an overview of some directions to start with troubleshooting, let's get back to the console screen that you hopefully pulled off without a hitch from choosing "resume" at the recovery menu. It's a pain to be stuck without a mouse at the console when you've got a lot of copying and pasting to do, so prepare yourself with some gpm for mouse support and some other tools: links/links2 or w3m (web browsers), vim (text editor), dpkg, apt, less (vim style keys and searching like man), and grep. I'm probably leaving a few out.



                                                                            Some particularly useful commands for dpkg are dpkg -L to show files for packages that are already installed and dpkg -l | less to show all packages which are currently installed (piped to less).Sometimes gpm is a little finicky about letting you select things, so you can restart it with /etc/init.d/gpm restart but you might have problems with clicking on links in a page before you restart w3m or the browser links. w3m is a little easier to scroll around and generally better for authenticated sessions (e.g., logging into forums for help). It takes a bit of getting used to hitting the Esc key to click on links (the hyperlinks) though, and the learning curve is a bit steeper than with the browser known as links.



                                                                            Unless you've got an Nvidia card or something with proprietary driver support for linux that you want to try, I'd shy away from kernel drivers before trying things with xorg--Try troubleshooting the xorg drivers first because it can be a lot easier than customizing a kernel for hardware (depending on the brand). The thing is that you might wind up following a series of links that lead you in the wrong direction, with chip makers sending you to the card makers and card makers giving you no support. As for trying out different kernels for different "vanilla" versions of the driver, stick with kernel versions that aren't far off from your current one (given by uname -r) unless you're really interested in testing. There's a pretty good chance that the latest mainstream kernel won't even boot up on your system, so why bother if you're stuck with a half-way broken setup? Keep focused on doing the bare minimum that it takes to get back up again so you're not falling behind on too much work. You can type things up in emacs, vim or pico/nano or check your email in mutt or pine, but eventually you'll want to come back to the 21st century.



                                                                            Good luck!







                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                            edited Aug 9 '16 at 9:39


























                                                                            community wiki





                                                                            4 revs, 2 users 98%
                                                                            Adam























                                                                                up vote
                                                                                13
                                                                                down vote













                                                                                If you have more than one video port on your graphics card (or more than one graphics card), then plugging the monitor into a different port may fix the problem.



                                                                                I've had an issue in the past with dual-DVI graphic cards, where it won't boot using one of the ports (secondary maybe?), but works fine on the other port.






                                                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                                                • 2




                                                                                  I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                                                                                  – Rots
                                                                                  Jun 30 '14 at 10:24















                                                                                up vote
                                                                                13
                                                                                down vote













                                                                                If you have more than one video port on your graphics card (or more than one graphics card), then plugging the monitor into a different port may fix the problem.



                                                                                I've had an issue in the past with dual-DVI graphic cards, where it won't boot using one of the ports (secondary maybe?), but works fine on the other port.






                                                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                                                • 2




                                                                                  I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                                                                                  – Rots
                                                                                  Jun 30 '14 at 10:24













                                                                                up vote
                                                                                13
                                                                                down vote










                                                                                up vote
                                                                                13
                                                                                down vote









                                                                                If you have more than one video port on your graphics card (or more than one graphics card), then plugging the monitor into a different port may fix the problem.



                                                                                I've had an issue in the past with dual-DVI graphic cards, where it won't boot using one of the ports (secondary maybe?), but works fine on the other port.






                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                If you have more than one video port on your graphics card (or more than one graphics card), then plugging the monitor into a different port may fix the problem.



                                                                                I've had an issue in the past with dual-DVI graphic cards, where it won't boot using one of the ports (secondary maybe?), but works fine on the other port.







                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                                edited Feb 8 '13 at 1:54


























                                                                                community wiki





                                                                                2 revs, 2 users 50%
                                                                                dolan










                                                                                • 2




                                                                                  I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                                                                                  – Rots
                                                                                  Jun 30 '14 at 10:24














                                                                                • 2




                                                                                  I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                                                                                  – Rots
                                                                                  Jun 30 '14 at 10:24








                                                                                2




                                                                                2




                                                                                I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                                                                                – Rots
                                                                                Jun 30 '14 at 10:24




                                                                                I disabled the on-board graphics to fix this problem
                                                                                – Rots
                                                                                Jun 30 '14 at 10:24










                                                                                up vote
                                                                                13
                                                                                down vote













                                                                                If Ubuntu 10.04 booted, but not 10.10 or newer versions booted



                                                                                Chances are your computer's ACPI is not supported. Ubuntu 10.04 supported drivers for the ACPI, but dropped supported for that since 10.10.



                                                                                To try that, change the BootOptions to nolapic and see if the Ubuntu Live CD boots (info).





                                                                                If it worked, you have 2 options to make the LiveCD boot:





                                                                                1. Disable the "New Card Interface" (which I saw the method in UbuntuForums)




                                                                                  • Go to BIOS > Security> I/O interface Security> "New interface card". Set it to Locked.


                                                                                  • Make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                2. Or, disabling the ACPI, which is not recommended because it may disable some crucial features on you computer (like fans). This is not recommended unless you have tried the first option and you know what you are doing!



                                                                                  Instructions (source):




                                                                                  • Restart your computer.


                                                                                  • Press the key indicated during the startup messages (usually F2, Esc, or F1) to enter BIOS.


                                                                                  • Click on the "Power Settings" menu.


                                                                                  • Highlight the ACPI entry, press Enter, select "Disabled" and press Enter again.


                                                                                  • Press Esc and Y to exit and save.


                                                                                  • Again, make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                Different PC manufacturers have different BIOSes, so read your computer's manual if your computer's BIOS doesn't show up.






                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                  13
                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                  If Ubuntu 10.04 booted, but not 10.10 or newer versions booted



                                                                                  Chances are your computer's ACPI is not supported. Ubuntu 10.04 supported drivers for the ACPI, but dropped supported for that since 10.10.



                                                                                  To try that, change the BootOptions to nolapic and see if the Ubuntu Live CD boots (info).





                                                                                  If it worked, you have 2 options to make the LiveCD boot:





                                                                                  1. Disable the "New Card Interface" (which I saw the method in UbuntuForums)




                                                                                    • Go to BIOS > Security> I/O interface Security> "New interface card". Set it to Locked.


                                                                                    • Make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                  2. Or, disabling the ACPI, which is not recommended because it may disable some crucial features on you computer (like fans). This is not recommended unless you have tried the first option and you know what you are doing!



                                                                                    Instructions (source):




                                                                                    • Restart your computer.


                                                                                    • Press the key indicated during the startup messages (usually F2, Esc, or F1) to enter BIOS.


                                                                                    • Click on the "Power Settings" menu.


                                                                                    • Highlight the ACPI entry, press Enter, select "Disabled" and press Enter again.


                                                                                    • Press Esc and Y to exit and save.


                                                                                    • Again, make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                  Different PC manufacturers have different BIOSes, so read your computer's manual if your computer's BIOS doesn't show up.






                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    13
                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    13
                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                    If Ubuntu 10.04 booted, but not 10.10 or newer versions booted



                                                                                    Chances are your computer's ACPI is not supported. Ubuntu 10.04 supported drivers for the ACPI, but dropped supported for that since 10.10.



                                                                                    To try that, change the BootOptions to nolapic and see if the Ubuntu Live CD boots (info).





                                                                                    If it worked, you have 2 options to make the LiveCD boot:





                                                                                    1. Disable the "New Card Interface" (which I saw the method in UbuntuForums)




                                                                                      • Go to BIOS > Security> I/O interface Security> "New interface card". Set it to Locked.


                                                                                      • Make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                    2. Or, disabling the ACPI, which is not recommended because it may disable some crucial features on you computer (like fans). This is not recommended unless you have tried the first option and you know what you are doing!



                                                                                      Instructions (source):




                                                                                      • Restart your computer.


                                                                                      • Press the key indicated during the startup messages (usually F2, Esc, or F1) to enter BIOS.


                                                                                      • Click on the "Power Settings" menu.


                                                                                      • Highlight the ACPI entry, press Enter, select "Disabled" and press Enter again.


                                                                                      • Press Esc and Y to exit and save.


                                                                                      • Again, make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                    Different PC manufacturers have different BIOSes, so read your computer's manual if your computer's BIOS doesn't show up.






                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                    If Ubuntu 10.04 booted, but not 10.10 or newer versions booted



                                                                                    Chances are your computer's ACPI is not supported. Ubuntu 10.04 supported drivers for the ACPI, but dropped supported for that since 10.10.



                                                                                    To try that, change the BootOptions to nolapic and see if the Ubuntu Live CD boots (info).





                                                                                    If it worked, you have 2 options to make the LiveCD boot:





                                                                                    1. Disable the "New Card Interface" (which I saw the method in UbuntuForums)




                                                                                      • Go to BIOS > Security> I/O interface Security> "New interface card". Set it to Locked.


                                                                                      • Make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                    2. Or, disabling the ACPI, which is not recommended because it may disable some crucial features on you computer (like fans). This is not recommended unless you have tried the first option and you know what you are doing!



                                                                                      Instructions (source):




                                                                                      • Restart your computer.


                                                                                      • Press the key indicated during the startup messages (usually F2, Esc, or F1) to enter BIOS.


                                                                                      • Click on the "Power Settings" menu.


                                                                                      • Highlight the ACPI entry, press Enter, select "Disabled" and press Enter again.


                                                                                      • Press Esc and Y to exit and save.


                                                                                      • Again, make sure you have a Windows Recovery CD available if you have Windows, because Windows may show up as an error.





                                                                                    Different PC manufacturers have different BIOSes, so read your computer's manual if your computer's BIOS doesn't show up.







                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                    edited Apr 1 '13 at 22:03









                                                                                    Kevin Bowen

                                                                                    14.2k145969




                                                                                    14.2k145969










                                                                                    answered Apr 28 '12 at 0:38









                                                                                    Emerson Hsieh

                                                                                    5,36553157




                                                                                    5,36553157






















                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        13
                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                        I had the same problem.



                                                                                        I just fixed it. (kind of)
                                                                                        My solution (so you can boot back into your GUI) (don't know if it really was this or if it where some thing together):




                                                                                        • open TTY (ctrl + alt + F1) to type the commands.


                                                                                        • make sure the radeon open-source drivers are installed.
                                                                                          https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonDriver


                                                                                        • delete all the fglrx drivers:

                                                                                          I first tried: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Troubleshooting/VideoDriverDetection#Problem:_Need_to_purge_-fglrx

                                                                                          and later tried this:
                                                                                          sudo apt-get remove fglrx*



                                                                                        after that I could reboot and login.



                                                                                        OPTIONAL: if you have login loop (type password and is accepted, it will re-ask for your password):
                                                                                        (make backup of the file)
                                                                                        mv ~/.Xauthority ~/.Xauthority.old
                                                                                        and retry to login.



                                                                                        any question, just ask.






                                                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                                                        • For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                                                                                          – Rafal
                                                                                          Aug 5 '14 at 20:29










                                                                                        • For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                                                                                          – Rotomano
                                                                                          Apr 3 '16 at 20:47















                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        13
                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                        I had the same problem.



                                                                                        I just fixed it. (kind of)
                                                                                        My solution (so you can boot back into your GUI) (don't know if it really was this or if it where some thing together):




                                                                                        • open TTY (ctrl + alt + F1) to type the commands.


                                                                                        • make sure the radeon open-source drivers are installed.
                                                                                          https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonDriver


                                                                                        • delete all the fglrx drivers:

                                                                                          I first tried: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Troubleshooting/VideoDriverDetection#Problem:_Need_to_purge_-fglrx

                                                                                          and later tried this:
                                                                                          sudo apt-get remove fglrx*



                                                                                        after that I could reboot and login.



                                                                                        OPTIONAL: if you have login loop (type password and is accepted, it will re-ask for your password):
                                                                                        (make backup of the file)
                                                                                        mv ~/.Xauthority ~/.Xauthority.old
                                                                                        and retry to login.



                                                                                        any question, just ask.






                                                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                                                        • For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                                                                                          – Rafal
                                                                                          Aug 5 '14 at 20:29










                                                                                        • For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                                                                                          – Rotomano
                                                                                          Apr 3 '16 at 20:47













                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        13
                                                                                        down vote










                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        13
                                                                                        down vote









                                                                                        I had the same problem.



                                                                                        I just fixed it. (kind of)
                                                                                        My solution (so you can boot back into your GUI) (don't know if it really was this or if it where some thing together):




                                                                                        • open TTY (ctrl + alt + F1) to type the commands.


                                                                                        • make sure the radeon open-source drivers are installed.
                                                                                          https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonDriver


                                                                                        • delete all the fglrx drivers:

                                                                                          I first tried: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Troubleshooting/VideoDriverDetection#Problem:_Need_to_purge_-fglrx

                                                                                          and later tried this:
                                                                                          sudo apt-get remove fglrx*



                                                                                        after that I could reboot and login.



                                                                                        OPTIONAL: if you have login loop (type password and is accepted, it will re-ask for your password):
                                                                                        (make backup of the file)
                                                                                        mv ~/.Xauthority ~/.Xauthority.old
                                                                                        and retry to login.



                                                                                        any question, just ask.






                                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                                        I had the same problem.



                                                                                        I just fixed it. (kind of)
                                                                                        My solution (so you can boot back into your GUI) (don't know if it really was this or if it where some thing together):




                                                                                        • open TTY (ctrl + alt + F1) to type the commands.


                                                                                        • make sure the radeon open-source drivers are installed.
                                                                                          https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RadeonDriver


                                                                                        • delete all the fglrx drivers:

                                                                                          I first tried: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Troubleshooting/VideoDriverDetection#Problem:_Need_to_purge_-fglrx

                                                                                          and later tried this:
                                                                                          sudo apt-get remove fglrx*



                                                                                        after that I could reboot and login.



                                                                                        OPTIONAL: if you have login loop (type password and is accepted, it will re-ask for your password):
                                                                                        (make backup of the file)
                                                                                        mv ~/.Xauthority ~/.Xauthority.old
                                                                                        and retry to login.



                                                                                        any question, just ask.







                                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                                                        edited Apr 5 '16 at 9:47

























                                                                                        answered Oct 21 '13 at 17:28









                                                                                        Ralph Bisschops

                                                                                        13118




                                                                                        13118












                                                                                        • For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                                                                                          – Rafal
                                                                                          Aug 5 '14 at 20:29










                                                                                        • For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                                                                                          – Rotomano
                                                                                          Apr 3 '16 at 20:47


















                                                                                        • For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                                                                                          – Rafal
                                                                                          Aug 5 '14 at 20:29










                                                                                        • For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                                                                                          – Rotomano
                                                                                          Apr 3 '16 at 20:47
















                                                                                        For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                                                                                        – Rafal
                                                                                        Aug 5 '14 at 20:29




                                                                                        For me, first using "update grub loader" from recovery menu, removing fglrx driversm, installing `gdm`` and installing open-source drivers worked, though log in screen looks different.
                                                                                        – Rafal
                                                                                        Aug 5 '14 at 20:29












                                                                                        For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                                                                                        – Rotomano
                                                                                        Apr 3 '16 at 20:47




                                                                                        For me on 14.04 LTS the solution was just sudo apt-get remove fglrx*
                                                                                        – Rotomano
                                                                                        Apr 3 '16 at 20:47










                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        11
                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                        I upgraded from 10.10 to 11.04 to 12.04 LTS, and when 12.04 loaded for the first time, I had a blank screen after the GRUB menu. It actually booted fine - I could SSH into the system as usual, but the video at the actual console didn't work. Booting into recovery mode worked fine, too. Here was the solution.



                                                                                        Hardware = Macbook, early 2008, Macbook4,1. (Black - Early 2008/Penryn)



                                                                                        After much trial and error, the solution was the editing and updating GRUB as shown below. The relevant edits were




                                                                                        • GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"

                                                                                        • GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768


                                                                                        sudo nano /etc/defaults/grub
                                                                                        sudo update-grub



                                                                                        # If you change this file, run 'update-grub' afterwards to update
                                                                                        # /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
                                                                                        # For full documentation of the options in this file, see:
                                                                                        # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration'

                                                                                        GRUB_DEFAULT=0
                                                                                        #GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0
                                                                                        GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true
                                                                                        GRUB_TIMEOUT=2
                                                                                        GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian`
                                                                                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"
                                                                                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="nopat"

                                                                                        # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs
                                                                                        # This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains
                                                                                        # the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...)
                                                                                        #GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef"

                                                                                        # Uncomment to disable graphical terminal (grub-pc only)
                                                                                        #GRUB_TERMINAL=console

                                                                                        # The resolution used on graphical terminal
                                                                                        # note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE
                                                                                        # you can see them in real GRUB with the command `vbeinfo'
                                                                                        GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768

                                                                                        # Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux
                                                                                        #GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true

                                                                                        # Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries
                                                                                        #GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"

                                                                                        # Uncomment to get a beep at grub start
                                                                                        #GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1"





                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                          11
                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                          I upgraded from 10.10 to 11.04 to 12.04 LTS, and when 12.04 loaded for the first time, I had a blank screen after the GRUB menu. It actually booted fine - I could SSH into the system as usual, but the video at the actual console didn't work. Booting into recovery mode worked fine, too. Here was the solution.



                                                                                          Hardware = Macbook, early 2008, Macbook4,1. (Black - Early 2008/Penryn)



                                                                                          After much trial and error, the solution was the editing and updating GRUB as shown below. The relevant edits were




                                                                                          • GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"

                                                                                          • GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768


                                                                                          sudo nano /etc/defaults/grub
                                                                                          sudo update-grub



                                                                                          # If you change this file, run 'update-grub' afterwards to update
                                                                                          # /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
                                                                                          # For full documentation of the options in this file, see:
                                                                                          # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration'

                                                                                          GRUB_DEFAULT=0
                                                                                          #GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0
                                                                                          GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true
                                                                                          GRUB_TIMEOUT=2
                                                                                          GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian`
                                                                                          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"
                                                                                          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="nopat"

                                                                                          # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs
                                                                                          # This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains
                                                                                          # the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...)
                                                                                          #GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef"

                                                                                          # Uncomment to disable graphical terminal (grub-pc only)
                                                                                          #GRUB_TERMINAL=console

                                                                                          # The resolution used on graphical terminal
                                                                                          # note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE
                                                                                          # you can see them in real GRUB with the command `vbeinfo'
                                                                                          GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768

                                                                                          # Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux
                                                                                          #GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true

                                                                                          # Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries
                                                                                          #GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"

                                                                                          # Uncomment to get a beep at grub start
                                                                                          #GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1"





                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                            11
                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                            11
                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                            I upgraded from 10.10 to 11.04 to 12.04 LTS, and when 12.04 loaded for the first time, I had a blank screen after the GRUB menu. It actually booted fine - I could SSH into the system as usual, but the video at the actual console didn't work. Booting into recovery mode worked fine, too. Here was the solution.



                                                                                            Hardware = Macbook, early 2008, Macbook4,1. (Black - Early 2008/Penryn)



                                                                                            After much trial and error, the solution was the editing and updating GRUB as shown below. The relevant edits were




                                                                                            • GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"

                                                                                            • GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768


                                                                                            sudo nano /etc/defaults/grub
                                                                                            sudo update-grub



                                                                                            # If you change this file, run 'update-grub' afterwards to update
                                                                                            # /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
                                                                                            # For full documentation of the options in this file, see:
                                                                                            # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration'

                                                                                            GRUB_DEFAULT=0
                                                                                            #GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0
                                                                                            GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true
                                                                                            GRUB_TIMEOUT=2
                                                                                            GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian`
                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"
                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="nopat"

                                                                                            # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs
                                                                                            # This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains
                                                                                            # the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...)
                                                                                            #GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef"

                                                                                            # Uncomment to disable graphical terminal (grub-pc only)
                                                                                            #GRUB_TERMINAL=console

                                                                                            # The resolution used on graphical terminal
                                                                                            # note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE
                                                                                            # you can see them in real GRUB with the command `vbeinfo'
                                                                                            GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768

                                                                                            # Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux
                                                                                            #GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true

                                                                                            # Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries
                                                                                            #GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"

                                                                                            # Uncomment to get a beep at grub start
                                                                                            #GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1"





                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                            I upgraded from 10.10 to 11.04 to 12.04 LTS, and when 12.04 loaded for the first time, I had a blank screen after the GRUB menu. It actually booted fine - I could SSH into the system as usual, but the video at the actual console didn't work. Booting into recovery mode worked fine, too. Here was the solution.



                                                                                            Hardware = Macbook, early 2008, Macbook4,1. (Black - Early 2008/Penryn)



                                                                                            After much trial and error, the solution was the editing and updating GRUB as shown below. The relevant edits were




                                                                                            • GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"

                                                                                            • GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768


                                                                                            sudo nano /etc/defaults/grub
                                                                                            sudo update-grub



                                                                                            # If you change this file, run 'update-grub' afterwards to update
                                                                                            # /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
                                                                                            # For full documentation of the options in this file, see:
                                                                                            # info -f grub -n 'Simple configuration'

                                                                                            GRUB_DEFAULT=0
                                                                                            #GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT=0
                                                                                            GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT_QUIET=true
                                                                                            GRUB_TIMEOUT=2
                                                                                            GRUB_DISTRIBUTOR=`lsb_release -i -s 2> /dev/null || echo Debian`
                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset"
                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="nopat"

                                                                                            # Uncomment to enable BadRAM filtering, modify to suit your needs
                                                                                            # This works with Linux (no patch required) and with any kernel that obtains
                                                                                            # the memory map information from GRUB (GNU Mach, kernel of FreeBSD ...)
                                                                                            #GRUB_BADRAM="0x01234567,0xfefefefe,0x89abcdef,0xefefefef"

                                                                                            # Uncomment to disable graphical terminal (grub-pc only)
                                                                                            #GRUB_TERMINAL=console

                                                                                            # The resolution used on graphical terminal
                                                                                            # note that you can use only modes which your graphic card supports via VBE
                                                                                            # you can see them in real GRUB with the command `vbeinfo'
                                                                                            GRUB_GFXMODE=1024x768

                                                                                            # Uncomment if you don't want GRUB to pass "root=UUID=xxx" parameter to Linux
                                                                                            #GRUB_DISABLE_LINUX_UUID=true

                                                                                            # Uncomment to disable generation of recovery mode menu entries
                                                                                            #GRUB_DISABLE_RECOVERY="true"

                                                                                            # Uncomment to get a beep at grub start
                                                                                            #GRUB_INIT_TUNE="480 440 1"






                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                            edited Jul 2 '12 at 9:53









                                                                                            Eliah Kagan

                                                                                            81.1k20227364




                                                                                            81.1k20227364










                                                                                            answered Jul 2 '12 at 3:56









                                                                                            craig

                                                                                            1112




                                                                                            1112






















                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                11
                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                Turns out I had to create a LiveCD and completely reinstall GRUB. After I did this, things are working fine again.



                                                                                                Documentation for re-installing grub is here : help.ubuntu.com.






                                                                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                                                                • 2




                                                                                                  to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                                                                                                  – stivlo
                                                                                                  Apr 12 '12 at 10:43















                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                11
                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                Turns out I had to create a LiveCD and completely reinstall GRUB. After I did this, things are working fine again.



                                                                                                Documentation for re-installing grub is here : help.ubuntu.com.






                                                                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                                                                • 2




                                                                                                  to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                                                                                                  – stivlo
                                                                                                  Apr 12 '12 at 10:43













                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                11
                                                                                                down vote










                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                11
                                                                                                down vote









                                                                                                Turns out I had to create a LiveCD and completely reinstall GRUB. After I did this, things are working fine again.



                                                                                                Documentation for re-installing grub is here : help.ubuntu.com.






                                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                                Turns out I had to create a LiveCD and completely reinstall GRUB. After I did this, things are working fine again.



                                                                                                Documentation for re-installing grub is here : help.ubuntu.com.







                                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                                                edited Nov 2 '12 at 17:25









                                                                                                belacqua

                                                                                                15.7k1472103




                                                                                                15.7k1472103










                                                                                                answered Oct 15 '10 at 13:45









                                                                                                Doughy

                                                                                                95141016




                                                                                                95141016








                                                                                                • 2




                                                                                                  to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                                                                                                  – stivlo
                                                                                                  Apr 12 '12 at 10:43














                                                                                                • 2




                                                                                                  to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                                                                                                  – stivlo
                                                                                                  Apr 12 '12 at 10:43








                                                                                                2




                                                                                                2




                                                                                                to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                                                                                                – stivlo
                                                                                                Apr 12 '12 at 10:43




                                                                                                to reinstall grub, the documentation is here help.ubuntu.com/community/Grub2#ChRoot
                                                                                                – stivlo
                                                                                                Apr 12 '12 at 10:43










                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                10
                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                This one helped at least a bit:
                                                                                                http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=9965194&postcount=8



                                                                                                In summary:




                                                                                                1. Run gksu gedit /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash.

                                                                                                2. In the text editor, add FRAMEBUFFER=y to the file.

                                                                                                3. Save the file and quit the text editor.

                                                                                                4. Run (in a Terminal): sudo update-initramfs -u






                                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                  10
                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                  This one helped at least a bit:
                                                                                                  http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=9965194&postcount=8



                                                                                                  In summary:




                                                                                                  1. Run gksu gedit /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash.

                                                                                                  2. In the text editor, add FRAMEBUFFER=y to the file.

                                                                                                  3. Save the file and quit the text editor.

                                                                                                  4. Run (in a Terminal): sudo update-initramfs -u






                                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                    10
                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                    10
                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                    This one helped at least a bit:
                                                                                                    http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=9965194&postcount=8



                                                                                                    In summary:




                                                                                                    1. Run gksu gedit /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash.

                                                                                                    2. In the text editor, add FRAMEBUFFER=y to the file.

                                                                                                    3. Save the file and quit the text editor.

                                                                                                    4. Run (in a Terminal): sudo update-initramfs -u






                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                    This one helped at least a bit:
                                                                                                    http://ubuntuforums.org/showpost.php?p=9965194&postcount=8



                                                                                                    In summary:




                                                                                                    1. Run gksu gedit /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/splash.

                                                                                                    2. In the text editor, add FRAMEBUFFER=y to the file.

                                                                                                    3. Save the file and quit the text editor.

                                                                                                    4. Run (in a Terminal): sudo update-initramfs -u







                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                                    edited Feb 3 '13 at 5:18









                                                                                                    Eliah Kagan

                                                                                                    81.1k20227364




                                                                                                    81.1k20227364










                                                                                                    answered Oct 14 '10 at 19:34







                                                                                                    Shanttu





























                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                        9
                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                        I have had this problem a few times. I occasionally get errors detecting one of the HDDs, and I think the boot order gets corrupted in the BIOS. Fixing the boot order solves the boot problem. I have an old Nov 2005 ASUS mobo with a 750 GB WD and a 1.5TB Samsung hard disk.






                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                          9
                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                          I have had this problem a few times. I occasionally get errors detecting one of the HDDs, and I think the boot order gets corrupted in the BIOS. Fixing the boot order solves the boot problem. I have an old Nov 2005 ASUS mobo with a 750 GB WD and a 1.5TB Samsung hard disk.






                                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                            9
                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                            9
                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                            I have had this problem a few times. I occasionally get errors detecting one of the HDDs, and I think the boot order gets corrupted in the BIOS. Fixing the boot order solves the boot problem. I have an old Nov 2005 ASUS mobo with a 750 GB WD and a 1.5TB Samsung hard disk.






                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                            I have had this problem a few times. I occasionally get errors detecting one of the HDDs, and I think the boot order gets corrupted in the BIOS. Fixing the boot order solves the boot problem. I have an old Nov 2005 ASUS mobo with a 750 GB WD and a 1.5TB Samsung hard disk.







                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                                            edited Jul 20 '12 at 21:51









                                                                                                            Eliah Kagan

                                                                                                            81.1k20227364




                                                                                                            81.1k20227364










                                                                                                            answered Dec 10 '11 at 3:14









                                                                                                            Brad

                                                                                                            911




                                                                                                            911






















                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                8
                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                When the grub boot menu comes up, press e to edit the correct boot line. Where it says GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" change this to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset".



                                                                                                                If this works, then you can install proprietary graphics drivers which should get you going again.



                                                                                                                If you have trouble with the above, you can change the above line permanently in the grub configuration file.



                                                                                                                Boot into recovery mode (selection from the grub boot loader) and edit the file /etc/default/grub as per the above instructions.



                                                                                                                You can edit this file by typing:



                                                                                                                nano /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                You'll have to update the grub menu:



                                                                                                                update-grub


                                                                                                                then reboot by typing



                                                                                                                reboot





                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                                  8
                                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                                  When the grub boot menu comes up, press e to edit the correct boot line. Where it says GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" change this to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset".



                                                                                                                  If this works, then you can install proprietary graphics drivers which should get you going again.



                                                                                                                  If you have trouble with the above, you can change the above line permanently in the grub configuration file.



                                                                                                                  Boot into recovery mode (selection from the grub boot loader) and edit the file /etc/default/grub as per the above instructions.



                                                                                                                  You can edit this file by typing:



                                                                                                                  nano /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                  You'll have to update the grub menu:



                                                                                                                  update-grub


                                                                                                                  then reboot by typing



                                                                                                                  reboot





                                                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                    8
                                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                    8
                                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                                    When the grub boot menu comes up, press e to edit the correct boot line. Where it says GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" change this to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset".



                                                                                                                    If this works, then you can install proprietary graphics drivers which should get you going again.



                                                                                                                    If you have trouble with the above, you can change the above line permanently in the grub configuration file.



                                                                                                                    Boot into recovery mode (selection from the grub boot loader) and edit the file /etc/default/grub as per the above instructions.



                                                                                                                    You can edit this file by typing:



                                                                                                                    nano /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                    You'll have to update the grub menu:



                                                                                                                    update-grub


                                                                                                                    then reboot by typing



                                                                                                                    reboot





                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                    When the grub boot menu comes up, press e to edit the correct boot line. Where it says GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash" change this to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash nomodeset".



                                                                                                                    If this works, then you can install proprietary graphics drivers which should get you going again.



                                                                                                                    If you have trouble with the above, you can change the above line permanently in the grub configuration file.



                                                                                                                    Boot into recovery mode (selection from the grub boot loader) and edit the file /etc/default/grub as per the above instructions.



                                                                                                                    You can edit this file by typing:



                                                                                                                    nano /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                    You'll have to update the grub menu:



                                                                                                                    update-grub


                                                                                                                    then reboot by typing



                                                                                                                    reboot






                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                    edited Jul 9 '12 at 1:46









                                                                                                                    Jason Plank

                                                                                                                    1094




                                                                                                                    1094










                                                                                                                    answered May 26 '12 at 23:47









                                                                                                                    fabricator4

                                                                                                                    7,27112538




                                                                                                                    7,27112538






















                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                        8
                                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                                        I had this issue with Ubuntu 12.04 64bit version. I install all goes well, I enable the Nvidia drivers reboot and nothing but a black screen. I re-installed several times with the same results. I then remembered that I had this problem with previous versions of Ubuntu. I downloaded and installed the 32bit version then installed the Nvidia drivers and I did not have this issue. It only happens when I use the 64bit version with the Nvidia drivers.






                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                                          8
                                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                                          I had this issue with Ubuntu 12.04 64bit version. I install all goes well, I enable the Nvidia drivers reboot and nothing but a black screen. I re-installed several times with the same results. I then remembered that I had this problem with previous versions of Ubuntu. I downloaded and installed the 32bit version then installed the Nvidia drivers and I did not have this issue. It only happens when I use the 64bit version with the Nvidia drivers.






                                                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                            8
                                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                            8
                                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                                            I had this issue with Ubuntu 12.04 64bit version. I install all goes well, I enable the Nvidia drivers reboot and nothing but a black screen. I re-installed several times with the same results. I then remembered that I had this problem with previous versions of Ubuntu. I downloaded and installed the 32bit version then installed the Nvidia drivers and I did not have this issue. It only happens when I use the 64bit version with the Nvidia drivers.






                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                            I had this issue with Ubuntu 12.04 64bit version. I install all goes well, I enable the Nvidia drivers reboot and nothing but a black screen. I re-installed several times with the same results. I then remembered that I had this problem with previous versions of Ubuntu. I downloaded and installed the 32bit version then installed the Nvidia drivers and I did not have this issue. It only happens when I use the 64bit version with the Nvidia drivers.







                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                            answered Jul 31 '12 at 15:05


























                                                                                                                            community wiki





                                                                                                                            dtanderson























                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                8
                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                In case that the black screen is only intermittent (and that there might be a blinking cursor), lightgdm having a race condition and not being able to start properly could be the issue.



                                                                                                                                At least that was the case for me. See here for a solution: http://www.webupd8.org/2013/01/ubuntu-lightdm-black-screen-when-using.html (see also this bug report).



                                                                                                                                The gist of it: Use gdm and not lightgdm (i.e. sudo apt-get install gdm, and choose gdm as default login manager when asked).



                                                                                                                                Let me quickly describe the symptoms I had: At first, because also the graphics was having a problem, when this problem occurred, I would only see a blank screen, and no chance to switch to the other terminals by pressing Ctrl+Alt+F1-6 (the screen simply stayed completely black, or rather, a very dark purple or something).



                                                                                                                                This I fixed by adding the "nomodeset" kernel option, as stated e.g. in this answer.



                                                                                                                                But after that, I still intermittently couldn't boot up properly; now it would stop with a blinking cursor. And this, as the above link tells in more detail, is caused by lightdm having a race condition - which manifests itself mainly if the boot-up is very quick, e.g. from an SSD (as it is the case for me).



                                                                                                                                Hope this helps someone.






                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                                                  8
                                                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                                                  In case that the black screen is only intermittent (and that there might be a blinking cursor), lightgdm having a race condition and not being able to start properly could be the issue.



                                                                                                                                  At least that was the case for me. See here for a solution: http://www.webupd8.org/2013/01/ubuntu-lightdm-black-screen-when-using.html (see also this bug report).



                                                                                                                                  The gist of it: Use gdm and not lightgdm (i.e. sudo apt-get install gdm, and choose gdm as default login manager when asked).



                                                                                                                                  Let me quickly describe the symptoms I had: At first, because also the graphics was having a problem, when this problem occurred, I would only see a blank screen, and no chance to switch to the other terminals by pressing Ctrl+Alt+F1-6 (the screen simply stayed completely black, or rather, a very dark purple or something).



                                                                                                                                  This I fixed by adding the "nomodeset" kernel option, as stated e.g. in this answer.



                                                                                                                                  But after that, I still intermittently couldn't boot up properly; now it would stop with a blinking cursor. And this, as the above link tells in more detail, is caused by lightdm having a race condition - which manifests itself mainly if the boot-up is very quick, e.g. from an SSD (as it is the case for me).



                                                                                                                                  Hope this helps someone.






                                                                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                    8
                                                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                    8
                                                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                                                    In case that the black screen is only intermittent (and that there might be a blinking cursor), lightgdm having a race condition and not being able to start properly could be the issue.



                                                                                                                                    At least that was the case for me. See here for a solution: http://www.webupd8.org/2013/01/ubuntu-lightdm-black-screen-when-using.html (see also this bug report).



                                                                                                                                    The gist of it: Use gdm and not lightgdm (i.e. sudo apt-get install gdm, and choose gdm as default login manager when asked).



                                                                                                                                    Let me quickly describe the symptoms I had: At first, because also the graphics was having a problem, when this problem occurred, I would only see a blank screen, and no chance to switch to the other terminals by pressing Ctrl+Alt+F1-6 (the screen simply stayed completely black, or rather, a very dark purple or something).



                                                                                                                                    This I fixed by adding the "nomodeset" kernel option, as stated e.g. in this answer.



                                                                                                                                    But after that, I still intermittently couldn't boot up properly; now it would stop with a blinking cursor. And this, as the above link tells in more detail, is caused by lightdm having a race condition - which manifests itself mainly if the boot-up is very quick, e.g. from an SSD (as it is the case for me).



                                                                                                                                    Hope this helps someone.






                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                    In case that the black screen is only intermittent (and that there might be a blinking cursor), lightgdm having a race condition and not being able to start properly could be the issue.



                                                                                                                                    At least that was the case for me. See here for a solution: http://www.webupd8.org/2013/01/ubuntu-lightdm-black-screen-when-using.html (see also this bug report).



                                                                                                                                    The gist of it: Use gdm and not lightgdm (i.e. sudo apt-get install gdm, and choose gdm as default login manager when asked).



                                                                                                                                    Let me quickly describe the symptoms I had: At first, because also the graphics was having a problem, when this problem occurred, I would only see a blank screen, and no chance to switch to the other terminals by pressing Ctrl+Alt+F1-6 (the screen simply stayed completely black, or rather, a very dark purple or something).



                                                                                                                                    This I fixed by adding the "nomodeset" kernel option, as stated e.g. in this answer.



                                                                                                                                    But after that, I still intermittently couldn't boot up properly; now it would stop with a blinking cursor. And this, as the above link tells in more detail, is caused by lightdm having a race condition - which manifests itself mainly if the boot-up is very quick, e.g. from an SSD (as it is the case for me).



                                                                                                                                    Hope this helps someone.







                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                    edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:25


























                                                                                                                                    community wiki





                                                                                                                                    3 revs
                                                                                                                                    codeling























                                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                                        7
                                                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                                                        On my notebook I had funny problem. I thought I had black screen two times and I had to shut down it with button. Shortly before I tried again and I barely saw some dark letters in the center of the screen so I pressed the button which brightens up the screen and now it works :)

                                                                                                                                        Also, I've used http://sourceforge.net/projects/unetbootin/, maybe it helped.






                                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                                                          7
                                                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                                                          On my notebook I had funny problem. I thought I had black screen two times and I had to shut down it with button. Shortly before I tried again and I barely saw some dark letters in the center of the screen so I pressed the button which brightens up the screen and now it works :)

                                                                                                                                          Also, I've used http://sourceforge.net/projects/unetbootin/, maybe it helped.






                                                                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                            7
                                                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                            7
                                                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                                                            On my notebook I had funny problem. I thought I had black screen two times and I had to shut down it with button. Shortly before I tried again and I barely saw some dark letters in the center of the screen so I pressed the button which brightens up the screen and now it works :)

                                                                                                                                            Also, I've used http://sourceforge.net/projects/unetbootin/, maybe it helped.






                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                            On my notebook I had funny problem. I thought I had black screen two times and I had to shut down it with button. Shortly before I tried again and I barely saw some dark letters in the center of the screen so I pressed the button which brightens up the screen and now it works :)

                                                                                                                                            Also, I've used http://sourceforge.net/projects/unetbootin/, maybe it helped.







                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                            answered Aug 2 '12 at 19:08


























                                                                                                                                            community wiki





                                                                                                                                            Almir Sarajčić























                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                6
                                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                                UBUNTU 12.04 LTS install Problem, stuck/crash at loading screen. (Nvidia Graphics Cards)




                                                                                                                                                1. Remove Graphics Card from your machine.

                                                                                                                                                2. Install Ubuntu (You shouldn't get any errors when running generic driver.)

                                                                                                                                                3. After Ubuntu is installed then put graphics card back into machine while the tower still powered off. Then swap your VGA/HDMI/DVI cables to the graphics card.
                                                                                                                                                  Turn on computer and select the recovery option from the GRUB menu then boot normally.


                                                                                                                                                4. Go to Nvidia website and grab the linux driver it will come in .run format



                                                                                                                                                5. Install Driver using the following steps.



                                                                                                                                                  a. Move the driver to the desktop and rename it something simple and easy to remember.



                                                                                                                                                  b. Ctrl+Alt+F1



                                                                                                                                                  c. Run command sudo /etc/init.d/lightdm stop



                                                                                                                                                  d. Run command cd ~/Desktop DRIVERNAME.run (What you renamed it.)



                                                                                                                                                  e. Run command chmod +x DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                  f. Run command sudo ./DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                  g. Follow instructions and continue



                                                                                                                                                  TIP If you still get hung with "It appears you are running "X" server then change the command on Step 5c to as follows: sudo /etc/init.d/gdm stop



                                                                                                                                                6. Ctrl+Alt+F7


                                                                                                                                                7. Ctrl+Alt+t (Only use steps 7 & 8 if you can't access the restart button or see your screen.)


                                                                                                                                                8. Run the command Shutdown -h (OR sudo shutdown 0 -h if the other command fails.)


                                                                                                                                                9. Boot computer and enjoy :) I suggest printing these instructions.



                                                                                                                                                PS I am not sure if you can place graphics card into PC after installation this is the way it worked for me and I am passing it on. I might suggest trying to install the graphics card on step 1 with machine off first as it is much safer this way.






                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                                                                  6
                                                                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                                                                  UBUNTU 12.04 LTS install Problem, stuck/crash at loading screen. (Nvidia Graphics Cards)




                                                                                                                                                  1. Remove Graphics Card from your machine.

                                                                                                                                                  2. Install Ubuntu (You shouldn't get any errors when running generic driver.)

                                                                                                                                                  3. After Ubuntu is installed then put graphics card back into machine while the tower still powered off. Then swap your VGA/HDMI/DVI cables to the graphics card.
                                                                                                                                                    Turn on computer and select the recovery option from the GRUB menu then boot normally.


                                                                                                                                                  4. Go to Nvidia website and grab the linux driver it will come in .run format



                                                                                                                                                  5. Install Driver using the following steps.



                                                                                                                                                    a. Move the driver to the desktop and rename it something simple and easy to remember.



                                                                                                                                                    b. Ctrl+Alt+F1



                                                                                                                                                    c. Run command sudo /etc/init.d/lightdm stop



                                                                                                                                                    d. Run command cd ~/Desktop DRIVERNAME.run (What you renamed it.)



                                                                                                                                                    e. Run command chmod +x DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                    f. Run command sudo ./DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                    g. Follow instructions and continue



                                                                                                                                                    TIP If you still get hung with "It appears you are running "X" server then change the command on Step 5c to as follows: sudo /etc/init.d/gdm stop



                                                                                                                                                  6. Ctrl+Alt+F7


                                                                                                                                                  7. Ctrl+Alt+t (Only use steps 7 & 8 if you can't access the restart button or see your screen.)


                                                                                                                                                  8. Run the command Shutdown -h (OR sudo shutdown 0 -h if the other command fails.)


                                                                                                                                                  9. Boot computer and enjoy :) I suggest printing these instructions.



                                                                                                                                                  PS I am not sure if you can place graphics card into PC after installation this is the way it worked for me and I am passing it on. I might suggest trying to install the graphics card on step 1 with machine off first as it is much safer this way.






                                                                                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                    6
                                                                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                    6
                                                                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                                                                    UBUNTU 12.04 LTS install Problem, stuck/crash at loading screen. (Nvidia Graphics Cards)




                                                                                                                                                    1. Remove Graphics Card from your machine.

                                                                                                                                                    2. Install Ubuntu (You shouldn't get any errors when running generic driver.)

                                                                                                                                                    3. After Ubuntu is installed then put graphics card back into machine while the tower still powered off. Then swap your VGA/HDMI/DVI cables to the graphics card.
                                                                                                                                                      Turn on computer and select the recovery option from the GRUB menu then boot normally.


                                                                                                                                                    4. Go to Nvidia website and grab the linux driver it will come in .run format



                                                                                                                                                    5. Install Driver using the following steps.



                                                                                                                                                      a. Move the driver to the desktop and rename it something simple and easy to remember.



                                                                                                                                                      b. Ctrl+Alt+F1



                                                                                                                                                      c. Run command sudo /etc/init.d/lightdm stop



                                                                                                                                                      d. Run command cd ~/Desktop DRIVERNAME.run (What you renamed it.)



                                                                                                                                                      e. Run command chmod +x DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                      f. Run command sudo ./DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                      g. Follow instructions and continue



                                                                                                                                                      TIP If you still get hung with "It appears you are running "X" server then change the command on Step 5c to as follows: sudo /etc/init.d/gdm stop



                                                                                                                                                    6. Ctrl+Alt+F7


                                                                                                                                                    7. Ctrl+Alt+t (Only use steps 7 & 8 if you can't access the restart button or see your screen.)


                                                                                                                                                    8. Run the command Shutdown -h (OR sudo shutdown 0 -h if the other command fails.)


                                                                                                                                                    9. Boot computer and enjoy :) I suggest printing these instructions.



                                                                                                                                                    PS I am not sure if you can place graphics card into PC after installation this is the way it worked for me and I am passing it on. I might suggest trying to install the graphics card on step 1 with machine off first as it is much safer this way.






                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                    UBUNTU 12.04 LTS install Problem, stuck/crash at loading screen. (Nvidia Graphics Cards)




                                                                                                                                                    1. Remove Graphics Card from your machine.

                                                                                                                                                    2. Install Ubuntu (You shouldn't get any errors when running generic driver.)

                                                                                                                                                    3. After Ubuntu is installed then put graphics card back into machine while the tower still powered off. Then swap your VGA/HDMI/DVI cables to the graphics card.
                                                                                                                                                      Turn on computer and select the recovery option from the GRUB menu then boot normally.


                                                                                                                                                    4. Go to Nvidia website and grab the linux driver it will come in .run format



                                                                                                                                                    5. Install Driver using the following steps.



                                                                                                                                                      a. Move the driver to the desktop and rename it something simple and easy to remember.



                                                                                                                                                      b. Ctrl+Alt+F1



                                                                                                                                                      c. Run command sudo /etc/init.d/lightdm stop



                                                                                                                                                      d. Run command cd ~/Desktop DRIVERNAME.run (What you renamed it.)



                                                                                                                                                      e. Run command chmod +x DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                      f. Run command sudo ./DRIVERNAME.run



                                                                                                                                                      g. Follow instructions and continue



                                                                                                                                                      TIP If you still get hung with "It appears you are running "X" server then change the command on Step 5c to as follows: sudo /etc/init.d/gdm stop



                                                                                                                                                    6. Ctrl+Alt+F7


                                                                                                                                                    7. Ctrl+Alt+t (Only use steps 7 & 8 if you can't access the restart button or see your screen.)


                                                                                                                                                    8. Run the command Shutdown -h (OR sudo shutdown 0 -h if the other command fails.)


                                                                                                                                                    9. Boot computer and enjoy :) I suggest printing these instructions.



                                                                                                                                                    PS I am not sure if you can place graphics card into PC after installation this is the way it worked for me and I am passing it on. I might suggest trying to install the graphics card on step 1 with machine off first as it is much safer this way.







                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                                    edited May 26 '13 at 5:44


























                                                                                                                                                    community wiki





                                                                                                                                                    4 revs, 2 users 65%
                                                                                                                                                    Matthew Kaulfers
























                                                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                                                        4
                                                                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                                                                        I tried those methods as well -- no joy. Here's what did worked for me.



                                                                                                                                                        Here's the part that was useful:



                                                                                                                                                        Getting 1366x768 resolution



                                                                                                                                                        Create file /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution



                                                                                                                                                        echo insmod 915resolution
                                                                                                                                                        echo 915resolution 58 1366 768 32


                                                                                                                                                        and execute:



                                                                                                                                                        chmod +x /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution


                                                                                                                                                        In file /etc/default/grub, assign value 1366x768x32 to variables GRUB_GFXMODE and GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX:



                                                                                                                                                        GRUB_GFXMODE=1366x768x32
                                                                                                                                                        GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=1366x768x32


                                                                                                                                                        Execute:



                                                                                                                                                        sudo update-grub


                                                                                                                                                        reboot, now you have 1366x768 resolution.





                                                                                                                                                        Actually, I already had this resolution. But the added commands got rid of the black screen on boot-up and the need to switch video modes.






                                                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                                                                          4
                                                                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                                                                          I tried those methods as well -- no joy. Here's what did worked for me.



                                                                                                                                                          Here's the part that was useful:



                                                                                                                                                          Getting 1366x768 resolution



                                                                                                                                                          Create file /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution



                                                                                                                                                          echo insmod 915resolution
                                                                                                                                                          echo 915resolution 58 1366 768 32


                                                                                                                                                          and execute:



                                                                                                                                                          chmod +x /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution


                                                                                                                                                          In file /etc/default/grub, assign value 1366x768x32 to variables GRUB_GFXMODE and GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX:



                                                                                                                                                          GRUB_GFXMODE=1366x768x32
                                                                                                                                                          GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=1366x768x32


                                                                                                                                                          Execute:



                                                                                                                                                          sudo update-grub


                                                                                                                                                          reboot, now you have 1366x768 resolution.





                                                                                                                                                          Actually, I already had this resolution. But the added commands got rid of the black screen on boot-up and the need to switch video modes.






                                                                                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                                            4
                                                                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                                            4
                                                                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                                                                            I tried those methods as well -- no joy. Here's what did worked for me.



                                                                                                                                                            Here's the part that was useful:



                                                                                                                                                            Getting 1366x768 resolution



                                                                                                                                                            Create file /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution



                                                                                                                                                            echo insmod 915resolution
                                                                                                                                                            echo 915resolution 58 1366 768 32


                                                                                                                                                            and execute:



                                                                                                                                                            chmod +x /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution


                                                                                                                                                            In file /etc/default/grub, assign value 1366x768x32 to variables GRUB_GFXMODE and GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX:



                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_GFXMODE=1366x768x32
                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=1366x768x32


                                                                                                                                                            Execute:



                                                                                                                                                            sudo update-grub


                                                                                                                                                            reboot, now you have 1366x768 resolution.





                                                                                                                                                            Actually, I already had this resolution. But the added commands got rid of the black screen on boot-up and the need to switch video modes.






                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                            I tried those methods as well -- no joy. Here's what did worked for me.



                                                                                                                                                            Here's the part that was useful:



                                                                                                                                                            Getting 1366x768 resolution



                                                                                                                                                            Create file /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution



                                                                                                                                                            echo insmod 915resolution
                                                                                                                                                            echo 915resolution 58 1366 768 32


                                                                                                                                                            and execute:



                                                                                                                                                            chmod +x /etc/grub.d/01_915resolution


                                                                                                                                                            In file /etc/default/grub, assign value 1366x768x32 to variables GRUB_GFXMODE and GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX:



                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_GFXMODE=1366x768x32
                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX=1366x768x32


                                                                                                                                                            Execute:



                                                                                                                                                            sudo update-grub


                                                                                                                                                            reboot, now you have 1366x768 resolution.





                                                                                                                                                            Actually, I already had this resolution. But the added commands got rid of the black screen on boot-up and the need to switch video modes.







                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                                            edited Aug 28 '12 at 18:20









                                                                                                                                                            Peachy

                                                                                                                                                            4,89172843




                                                                                                                                                            4,89172843










                                                                                                                                                            answered Apr 30 '12 at 14:50









                                                                                                                                                            David

                                                                                                                                                            411




                                                                                                                                                            411






















                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                4
                                                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                                                This is specific to where the install fails and your installation behaves badly.



                                                                                                                                                                Requeriments




                                                                                                                                                                • You need access to the Recovery menu, if you don't then look for other options.

                                                                                                                                                                • Internet access with a DHCP-enabled network

                                                                                                                                                                • GUTS! Since this is a delicate process.


                                                                                                                                                                Procedure




                                                                                                                                                                1. Once you are in the recovery menu, select Activate Networking.

                                                                                                                                                                2. Now select drop to a root shell.

                                                                                                                                                                3. Run mount -a. (In my case that bad was the installation that I was forced to do this)

                                                                                                                                                                4. Verify that your network is up and running: ping -c 2 4.2.2.2 If this fails run dhclient. ping -c google.com if this fails run dhclient.

                                                                                                                                                                5. Now update your repositories: apt-get update

                                                                                                                                                                6. Install debsums: apt-get install debsums

                                                                                                                                                                7. Run debsums -s. It will give you a list of packages that have problems. Take note of each.

                                                                                                                                                                8. Now reinstall the packages that has problems: apt-get --reinstall install packages.

                                                                                                                                                                9. Update your grub just in case. update-grub.

                                                                                                                                                                10. Reboot and good luck.






                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                                                                                  4
                                                                                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                                                                                  This is specific to where the install fails and your installation behaves badly.



                                                                                                                                                                  Requeriments




                                                                                                                                                                  • You need access to the Recovery menu, if you don't then look for other options.

                                                                                                                                                                  • Internet access with a DHCP-enabled network

                                                                                                                                                                  • GUTS! Since this is a delicate process.


                                                                                                                                                                  Procedure




                                                                                                                                                                  1. Once you are in the recovery menu, select Activate Networking.

                                                                                                                                                                  2. Now select drop to a root shell.

                                                                                                                                                                  3. Run mount -a. (In my case that bad was the installation that I was forced to do this)

                                                                                                                                                                  4. Verify that your network is up and running: ping -c 2 4.2.2.2 If this fails run dhclient. ping -c google.com if this fails run dhclient.

                                                                                                                                                                  5. Now update your repositories: apt-get update

                                                                                                                                                                  6. Install debsums: apt-get install debsums

                                                                                                                                                                  7. Run debsums -s. It will give you a list of packages that have problems. Take note of each.

                                                                                                                                                                  8. Now reinstall the packages that has problems: apt-get --reinstall install packages.

                                                                                                                                                                  9. Update your grub just in case. update-grub.

                                                                                                                                                                  10. Reboot and good luck.






                                                                                                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                                    4
                                                                                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                                    4
                                                                                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                                                                                    This is specific to where the install fails and your installation behaves badly.



                                                                                                                                                                    Requeriments




                                                                                                                                                                    • You need access to the Recovery menu, if you don't then look for other options.

                                                                                                                                                                    • Internet access with a DHCP-enabled network

                                                                                                                                                                    • GUTS! Since this is a delicate process.


                                                                                                                                                                    Procedure




                                                                                                                                                                    1. Once you are in the recovery menu, select Activate Networking.

                                                                                                                                                                    2. Now select drop to a root shell.

                                                                                                                                                                    3. Run mount -a. (In my case that bad was the installation that I was forced to do this)

                                                                                                                                                                    4. Verify that your network is up and running: ping -c 2 4.2.2.2 If this fails run dhclient. ping -c google.com if this fails run dhclient.

                                                                                                                                                                    5. Now update your repositories: apt-get update

                                                                                                                                                                    6. Install debsums: apt-get install debsums

                                                                                                                                                                    7. Run debsums -s. It will give you a list of packages that have problems. Take note of each.

                                                                                                                                                                    8. Now reinstall the packages that has problems: apt-get --reinstall install packages.

                                                                                                                                                                    9. Update your grub just in case. update-grub.

                                                                                                                                                                    10. Reboot and good luck.






                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                    This is specific to where the install fails and your installation behaves badly.



                                                                                                                                                                    Requeriments




                                                                                                                                                                    • You need access to the Recovery menu, if you don't then look for other options.

                                                                                                                                                                    • Internet access with a DHCP-enabled network

                                                                                                                                                                    • GUTS! Since this is a delicate process.


                                                                                                                                                                    Procedure




                                                                                                                                                                    1. Once you are in the recovery menu, select Activate Networking.

                                                                                                                                                                    2. Now select drop to a root shell.

                                                                                                                                                                    3. Run mount -a. (In my case that bad was the installation that I was forced to do this)

                                                                                                                                                                    4. Verify that your network is up and running: ping -c 2 4.2.2.2 If this fails run dhclient. ping -c google.com if this fails run dhclient.

                                                                                                                                                                    5. Now update your repositories: apt-get update

                                                                                                                                                                    6. Install debsums: apt-get install debsums

                                                                                                                                                                    7. Run debsums -s. It will give you a list of packages that have problems. Take note of each.

                                                                                                                                                                    8. Now reinstall the packages that has problems: apt-get --reinstall install packages.

                                                                                                                                                                    9. Update your grub just in case. update-grub.

                                                                                                                                                                    10. Reboot and good luck.







                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                                                    answered Sep 27 '13 at 19:26


























                                                                                                                                                                    community wiki





                                                                                                                                                                    Braiam























                                                                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                                                                        3
                                                                                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                                                                                        After upgrading from 12.10 to 13.04, the login screen is black because brightness is set to lowest level (Intel Integrated Graphics)



                                                                                                                                                                        I've noticed that it would be a brightness problem cause I've listened to the Ubuntu's default drum sound when booting for the first time after upgrading. Before I find this solution, I had to increase the brightness level to see anything on the screen.



                                                                                                                                                                        For me, the solution came from this bug report at https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/1173059, by changing /etc/default/grub as root this way:



                                                                                                                                                                        Make a backup file, so you'll be able to restore it, if this solution doesn't work:



                                                                                                                                                                        sudo cp /etc/default/grub /etc/default/grub.original


                                                                                                                                                                        To open the file with sudo you can use this in the Terminal, for example:



                                                                                                                                                                        sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                                                                        Then, replace:



                                                                                                                                                                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


                                                                                                                                                                        to



                                                                                                                                                                        GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_osi=Linux acpi_backlight=vendor"


                                                                                                                                                                        You'll need to run update-grub2 to apply the change:



                                                                                                                                                                        sudo update-grub2


                                                                                                                                                                        That's it. After rebooting, it worked flawlessly for me (that is, my login screen has a normal brightness level).






                                                                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                                                                                          3
                                                                                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                                                                                          After upgrading from 12.10 to 13.04, the login screen is black because brightness is set to lowest level (Intel Integrated Graphics)



                                                                                                                                                                          I've noticed that it would be a brightness problem cause I've listened to the Ubuntu's default drum sound when booting for the first time after upgrading. Before I find this solution, I had to increase the brightness level to see anything on the screen.



                                                                                                                                                                          For me, the solution came from this bug report at https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/1173059, by changing /etc/default/grub as root this way:



                                                                                                                                                                          Make a backup file, so you'll be able to restore it, if this solution doesn't work:



                                                                                                                                                                          sudo cp /etc/default/grub /etc/default/grub.original


                                                                                                                                                                          To open the file with sudo you can use this in the Terminal, for example:



                                                                                                                                                                          sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                                                                          Then, replace:



                                                                                                                                                                          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


                                                                                                                                                                          to



                                                                                                                                                                          GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_osi=Linux acpi_backlight=vendor"


                                                                                                                                                                          You'll need to run update-grub2 to apply the change:



                                                                                                                                                                          sudo update-grub2


                                                                                                                                                                          That's it. After rebooting, it worked flawlessly for me (that is, my login screen has a normal brightness level).






                                                                                                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                                                            3
                                                                                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                                                            3
                                                                                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                                                                                            After upgrading from 12.10 to 13.04, the login screen is black because brightness is set to lowest level (Intel Integrated Graphics)



                                                                                                                                                                            I've noticed that it would be a brightness problem cause I've listened to the Ubuntu's default drum sound when booting for the first time after upgrading. Before I find this solution, I had to increase the brightness level to see anything on the screen.



                                                                                                                                                                            For me, the solution came from this bug report at https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/1173059, by changing /etc/default/grub as root this way:



                                                                                                                                                                            Make a backup file, so you'll be able to restore it, if this solution doesn't work:



                                                                                                                                                                            sudo cp /etc/default/grub /etc/default/grub.original


                                                                                                                                                                            To open the file with sudo you can use this in the Terminal, for example:



                                                                                                                                                                            sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                                                                            Then, replace:



                                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


                                                                                                                                                                            to



                                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_osi=Linux acpi_backlight=vendor"


                                                                                                                                                                            You'll need to run update-grub2 to apply the change:



                                                                                                                                                                            sudo update-grub2


                                                                                                                                                                            That's it. After rebooting, it worked flawlessly for me (that is, my login screen has a normal brightness level).






                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                            After upgrading from 12.10 to 13.04, the login screen is black because brightness is set to lowest level (Intel Integrated Graphics)



                                                                                                                                                                            I've noticed that it would be a brightness problem cause I've listened to the Ubuntu's default drum sound when booting for the first time after upgrading. Before I find this solution, I had to increase the brightness level to see anything on the screen.



                                                                                                                                                                            For me, the solution came from this bug report at https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/1173059, by changing /etc/default/grub as root this way:



                                                                                                                                                                            Make a backup file, so you'll be able to restore it, if this solution doesn't work:



                                                                                                                                                                            sudo cp /etc/default/grub /etc/default/grub.original


                                                                                                                                                                            To open the file with sudo you can use this in the Terminal, for example:



                                                                                                                                                                            sudo gedit /etc/default/grub


                                                                                                                                                                            Then, replace:



                                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash"


                                                                                                                                                                            to



                                                                                                                                                                            GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash acpi_osi=Linux acpi_backlight=vendor"


                                                                                                                                                                            You'll need to run update-grub2 to apply the change:



                                                                                                                                                                            sudo update-grub2


                                                                                                                                                                            That's it. After rebooting, it worked flawlessly for me (that is, my login screen has a normal brightness level).







                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                                                            edited Dec 1 '13 at 6:45


























                                                                                                                                                                            community wiki





                                                                                                                                                                            2 revs, 2 users 92%
                                                                                                                                                                            YuriC























                                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                2
                                                                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                It turns out the ATI Catalyst drivers were not compatible with the 13.10. I ended up re-installing the OS from the live CD and everything went fine, except now I have to figure out why there is no sound.






                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                  2
                                                                                                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                  It turns out the ATI Catalyst drivers were not compatible with the 13.10. I ended up re-installing the OS from the live CD and everything went fine, except now I have to figure out why there is no sound.






                                                                                                                                                                                  share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                    2
                                                                                                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                    2
                                                                                                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                                                                                                    It turns out the ATI Catalyst drivers were not compatible with the 13.10. I ended up re-installing the OS from the live CD and everything went fine, except now I have to figure out why there is no sound.






                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                                                                                    It turns out the ATI Catalyst drivers were not compatible with the 13.10. I ended up re-installing the OS from the live CD and everything went fine, except now I have to figure out why there is no sound.







                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                                                                                                                                    answered Oct 19 '13 at 9:46









                                                                                                                                                                                    AlexKibo88

                                                                                                                                                                                    71116




                                                                                                                                                                                    71116






















                                                                                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                        1
                                                                                                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                        I just had a similar issue with Xubuntu after installing ATI catalyst drivers. Purging the 2 fglrx packages allowed me to log in properly and have a desktop....though without the proper drivers and acceleration.






                                                                                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                          1
                                                                                                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                          I just had a similar issue with Xubuntu after installing ATI catalyst drivers. Purging the 2 fglrx packages allowed me to log in properly and have a desktop....though without the proper drivers and acceleration.






                                                                                                                                                                                          share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                            1
                                                                                                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                            1
                                                                                                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                                                                                                            I just had a similar issue with Xubuntu after installing ATI catalyst drivers. Purging the 2 fglrx packages allowed me to log in properly and have a desktop....though without the proper drivers and acceleration.






                                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                                                                                            I just had a similar issue with Xubuntu after installing ATI catalyst drivers. Purging the 2 fglrx packages allowed me to log in properly and have a desktop....though without the proper drivers and acceleration.







                                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                                                                                                                                                            answered Oct 18 '13 at 20:50









                                                                                                                                                                                            user204363

                                                                                                                                                                                            111




                                                                                                                                                                                            111






















                                                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 1) Impossible to solve at uefi-black-screen - uefi-bios has to be visible so you could then use an live-usb-stick properly. The accumulator has a chip too, this way the ransomware attacks via this chip...




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) pull out accumulator after machine is switched off (20 seconds pressing slightly the power-button off).



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) pull off the power-supply cable both ends.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) after waiting only do use the power-supply cable



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) switch on and quickly two fingers changing pressing 'ESC' and 'F2'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) disable recovery mode of uefi-settings



                                                                                                                                                                                                f) disable secure-boot



                                                                                                                                                                                                g) get sure that usb-booting order allows usb-live-stick at 1st place !!!
                                                                                                                                                                                                save and reboot from bios (leave accumulator away)



                                                                                                                                                                                                h) re-install ubuntu or repair the disk with ubuntu-recovery-modes, but I would prefer complete new installation alongside previous ubuntu-installation and delete Windows.
                                                                                                                                                                                                i) you need to delete Windows, because the chip of the accumulator wants to make a revival of ransomware for windows as previous first-boot-installation.




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 2) Black screen with Windows on booting first hard-disk, then it is deadly sure ransomware:



                                                                                                                                                                                                ... I had black screen today in the morning too, but my password was too long ... so the ransomware had no luck, despite of fact that I dont have dual-boot installation with windows here. There was only an buffer-overrun visible at my machine. I rebooted and the buffer-overrun (or underrun? - hybrid device here ...) was gone.



                                                                                                                                                                                                In case Jorge Castro has a dual-boot installation with Windows (no-matter-which-one) then I simply would press quick changing with two fingers the keys 'esc' and 'F2' to get back into uefi-bios before the machine boots into black screen after you have pressed the switch-off-button slightly for 20 seconds.



                                                                                                                                                                                                Replay:




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) switch-off the machine with slightly pressing 20 seconds the power- supply-button



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) wait a while ... in case of notebook pull the plugin-cable of power- supply and stick it in again, then take out the accumulator and put it in again.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) wait a while ... then switch-on your machine



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) now quick changing with two fingers between key 'F2' and 'ESC'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) uefi-bios should appear again ... then this is not finish !



                                                                                                                                                                                                f like foolproof) decide the boot-mode whether to enable or disable secure-boot (http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/17058-secure-boot-enable-disable-uefi.html). This decides whether you get back into windows to launch really http://malwarebytes.org - program.



                                                                                                                                                                                                g like gentleman) this is not gentleman-style but I saved your day.



                                                                                                                                                                                                When malwarebytes - program finished its job and avast too finished its job, use then a freeware registry-cleaner (http://heise.de)




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 3.) This way ubuntu-recovery should work again after step 1.) and step 2.)




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) free the memory



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) repair the file-system



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) go into root - terminal



                                                                                                                                                                                                type there:



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get install --reinstall grub* --fix-missing



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get update



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo update-grub2



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo passwd (new password like method here : http://nosy-x.com/password-001.html in paranoid method a suiting quantum-password)



                                                                                                                                                                                                happy coding and dont forget to eat a meal ...







                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                                                                                                • -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                                                                                                                                                                  – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                                                                                                                                                                  Dec 31 '16 at 23:51















                                                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 1) Impossible to solve at uefi-black-screen - uefi-bios has to be visible so you could then use an live-usb-stick properly. The accumulator has a chip too, this way the ransomware attacks via this chip...




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) pull out accumulator after machine is switched off (20 seconds pressing slightly the power-button off).



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) pull off the power-supply cable both ends.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) after waiting only do use the power-supply cable



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) switch on and quickly two fingers changing pressing 'ESC' and 'F2'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) disable recovery mode of uefi-settings



                                                                                                                                                                                                f) disable secure-boot



                                                                                                                                                                                                g) get sure that usb-booting order allows usb-live-stick at 1st place !!!
                                                                                                                                                                                                save and reboot from bios (leave accumulator away)



                                                                                                                                                                                                h) re-install ubuntu or repair the disk with ubuntu-recovery-modes, but I would prefer complete new installation alongside previous ubuntu-installation and delete Windows.
                                                                                                                                                                                                i) you need to delete Windows, because the chip of the accumulator wants to make a revival of ransomware for windows as previous first-boot-installation.




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 2) Black screen with Windows on booting first hard-disk, then it is deadly sure ransomware:



                                                                                                                                                                                                ... I had black screen today in the morning too, but my password was too long ... so the ransomware had no luck, despite of fact that I dont have dual-boot installation with windows here. There was only an buffer-overrun visible at my machine. I rebooted and the buffer-overrun (or underrun? - hybrid device here ...) was gone.



                                                                                                                                                                                                In case Jorge Castro has a dual-boot installation with Windows (no-matter-which-one) then I simply would press quick changing with two fingers the keys 'esc' and 'F2' to get back into uefi-bios before the machine boots into black screen after you have pressed the switch-off-button slightly for 20 seconds.



                                                                                                                                                                                                Replay:




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) switch-off the machine with slightly pressing 20 seconds the power- supply-button



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) wait a while ... in case of notebook pull the plugin-cable of power- supply and stick it in again, then take out the accumulator and put it in again.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) wait a while ... then switch-on your machine



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) now quick changing with two fingers between key 'F2' and 'ESC'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) uefi-bios should appear again ... then this is not finish !



                                                                                                                                                                                                f like foolproof) decide the boot-mode whether to enable or disable secure-boot (http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/17058-secure-boot-enable-disable-uefi.html). This decides whether you get back into windows to launch really http://malwarebytes.org - program.



                                                                                                                                                                                                g like gentleman) this is not gentleman-style but I saved your day.



                                                                                                                                                                                                When malwarebytes - program finished its job and avast too finished its job, use then a freeware registry-cleaner (http://heise.de)




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 3.) This way ubuntu-recovery should work again after step 1.) and step 2.)




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) free the memory



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) repair the file-system



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) go into root - terminal



                                                                                                                                                                                                type there:



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get install --reinstall grub* --fix-missing



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get update



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo update-grub2



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo passwd (new password like method here : http://nosy-x.com/password-001.html in paranoid method a suiting quantum-password)



                                                                                                                                                                                                happy coding and dont forget to eat a meal ...







                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                                                                                                • -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                                                                                                                                                                  – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                                                                                                                                                                  Dec 31 '16 at 23:51













                                                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                                                down vote










                                                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                                                down vote









                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 1) Impossible to solve at uefi-black-screen - uefi-bios has to be visible so you could then use an live-usb-stick properly. The accumulator has a chip too, this way the ransomware attacks via this chip...




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) pull out accumulator after machine is switched off (20 seconds pressing slightly the power-button off).



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) pull off the power-supply cable both ends.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) after waiting only do use the power-supply cable



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) switch on and quickly two fingers changing pressing 'ESC' and 'F2'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) disable recovery mode of uefi-settings



                                                                                                                                                                                                f) disable secure-boot



                                                                                                                                                                                                g) get sure that usb-booting order allows usb-live-stick at 1st place !!!
                                                                                                                                                                                                save and reboot from bios (leave accumulator away)



                                                                                                                                                                                                h) re-install ubuntu or repair the disk with ubuntu-recovery-modes, but I would prefer complete new installation alongside previous ubuntu-installation and delete Windows.
                                                                                                                                                                                                i) you need to delete Windows, because the chip of the accumulator wants to make a revival of ransomware for windows as previous first-boot-installation.




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 2) Black screen with Windows on booting first hard-disk, then it is deadly sure ransomware:



                                                                                                                                                                                                ... I had black screen today in the morning too, but my password was too long ... so the ransomware had no luck, despite of fact that I dont have dual-boot installation with windows here. There was only an buffer-overrun visible at my machine. I rebooted and the buffer-overrun (or underrun? - hybrid device here ...) was gone.



                                                                                                                                                                                                In case Jorge Castro has a dual-boot installation with Windows (no-matter-which-one) then I simply would press quick changing with two fingers the keys 'esc' and 'F2' to get back into uefi-bios before the machine boots into black screen after you have pressed the switch-off-button slightly for 20 seconds.



                                                                                                                                                                                                Replay:




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) switch-off the machine with slightly pressing 20 seconds the power- supply-button



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) wait a while ... in case of notebook pull the plugin-cable of power- supply and stick it in again, then take out the accumulator and put it in again.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) wait a while ... then switch-on your machine



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) now quick changing with two fingers between key 'F2' and 'ESC'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) uefi-bios should appear again ... then this is not finish !



                                                                                                                                                                                                f like foolproof) decide the boot-mode whether to enable or disable secure-boot (http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/17058-secure-boot-enable-disable-uefi.html). This decides whether you get back into windows to launch really http://malwarebytes.org - program.



                                                                                                                                                                                                g like gentleman) this is not gentleman-style but I saved your day.



                                                                                                                                                                                                When malwarebytes - program finished its job and avast too finished its job, use then a freeware registry-cleaner (http://heise.de)




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 3.) This way ubuntu-recovery should work again after step 1.) and step 2.)




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) free the memory



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) repair the file-system



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) go into root - terminal



                                                                                                                                                                                                type there:



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get install --reinstall grub* --fix-missing



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get update



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo update-grub2



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo passwd (new password like method here : http://nosy-x.com/password-001.html in paranoid method a suiting quantum-password)



                                                                                                                                                                                                happy coding and dont forget to eat a meal ...







                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 1) Impossible to solve at uefi-black-screen - uefi-bios has to be visible so you could then use an live-usb-stick properly. The accumulator has a chip too, this way the ransomware attacks via this chip...




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) pull out accumulator after machine is switched off (20 seconds pressing slightly the power-button off).



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) pull off the power-supply cable both ends.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) after waiting only do use the power-supply cable



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) switch on and quickly two fingers changing pressing 'ESC' and 'F2'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) disable recovery mode of uefi-settings



                                                                                                                                                                                                f) disable secure-boot



                                                                                                                                                                                                g) get sure that usb-booting order allows usb-live-stick at 1st place !!!
                                                                                                                                                                                                save and reboot from bios (leave accumulator away)



                                                                                                                                                                                                h) re-install ubuntu or repair the disk with ubuntu-recovery-modes, but I would prefer complete new installation alongside previous ubuntu-installation and delete Windows.
                                                                                                                                                                                                i) you need to delete Windows, because the chip of the accumulator wants to make a revival of ransomware for windows as previous first-boot-installation.




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 2) Black screen with Windows on booting first hard-disk, then it is deadly sure ransomware:



                                                                                                                                                                                                ... I had black screen today in the morning too, but my password was too long ... so the ransomware had no luck, despite of fact that I dont have dual-boot installation with windows here. There was only an buffer-overrun visible at my machine. I rebooted and the buffer-overrun (or underrun? - hybrid device here ...) was gone.



                                                                                                                                                                                                In case Jorge Castro has a dual-boot installation with Windows (no-matter-which-one) then I simply would press quick changing with two fingers the keys 'esc' and 'F2' to get back into uefi-bios before the machine boots into black screen after you have pressed the switch-off-button slightly for 20 seconds.



                                                                                                                                                                                                Replay:




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) switch-off the machine with slightly pressing 20 seconds the power- supply-button



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) wait a while ... in case of notebook pull the plugin-cable of power- supply and stick it in again, then take out the accumulator and put it in again.



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) wait a while ... then switch-on your machine



                                                                                                                                                                                                d) now quick changing with two fingers between key 'F2' and 'ESC'



                                                                                                                                                                                                e) uefi-bios should appear again ... then this is not finish !



                                                                                                                                                                                                f like foolproof) decide the boot-mode whether to enable or disable secure-boot (http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/17058-secure-boot-enable-disable-uefi.html). This decides whether you get back into windows to launch really http://malwarebytes.org - program.



                                                                                                                                                                                                g like gentleman) this is not gentleman-style but I saved your day.



                                                                                                                                                                                                When malwarebytes - program finished its job and avast too finished its job, use then a freeware registry-cleaner (http://heise.de)




                                                                                                                                                                                                situation 3.) This way ubuntu-recovery should work again after step 1.) and step 2.)




                                                                                                                                                                                                a) free the memory



                                                                                                                                                                                                b) repair the file-system



                                                                                                                                                                                                c) go into root - terminal



                                                                                                                                                                                                type there:



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get install --reinstall grub* --fix-missing



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo apt-get update



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo update-grub2



                                                                                                                                                                                                sudo passwd (new password like method here : http://nosy-x.com/password-001.html in paranoid method a suiting quantum-password)



                                                                                                                                                                                                happy coding and dont forget to eat a meal ...








                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                                                                                edited Jan 8 '16 at 4:03


























                                                                                                                                                                                                community wiki





                                                                                                                                                                                                2 revs
                                                                                                                                                                                                dschinn1001













                                                                                                                                                                                                • -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                                                                                                                                                                  – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                                                                                                                                                                  Dec 31 '16 at 23:51


















                                                                                                                                                                                                • -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                                                                                                                                                                  – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                                                                                                                                                                  Dec 31 '16 at 23:51
















                                                                                                                                                                                                -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                                                                                                                                                                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                                                                                                                                                                Dec 31 '16 at 23:51




                                                                                                                                                                                                -1 it was overly complicated answer even before advise to "don't forget to eat a meal..." which could be construed as condescending to the homeless or mentally / emotionally conflicted.
                                                                                                                                                                                                – WinEunuuchs2Unix
                                                                                                                                                                                                Dec 31 '16 at 23:51










                                                                                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                1
                                                                                                                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                                I have just had the same problem on Ubuntu 14.04.2. And this solved it:



                                                                                                                                                                                                 apt-get install ubuntu-desktop





                                                                                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                  1
                                                                                                                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                                                                                                                  I have just had the same problem on Ubuntu 14.04.2. And this solved it:



                                                                                                                                                                                                   apt-get install ubuntu-desktop





                                                                                                                                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                    1
                                                                                                                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                                                                                                    1
                                                                                                                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                                                                                                                    I have just had the same problem on Ubuntu 14.04.2. And this solved it:



                                                                                                                                                                                                     apt-get install ubuntu-desktop





                                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                                                    I have just had the same problem on Ubuntu 14.04.2. And this solved it:



                                                                                                                                                                                                     apt-get install ubuntu-desktop






                                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                                                                                                                                    answered Apr 7 '16 at 23:08


























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                                                                                                                                                                                                    Samer























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