this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2023
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I suddenly got the same problem in /efi/loader/entries all conf files reverted to previous uuid (first post ). To change uuid I just edited all conf files with the correct uuid for root.

I don't know if manually changing was correct or if I should use some sort command.

Bootctl status

UUID in status is wrong.

I have no idea what is reverting UUID back to the wrong one after updating system.

I could just reinstall but if possible I would like to try to fix this and learn.

Edit: Problem was that in /etc/kernel/cmdline had wrong UUID. Changed it to correct one and dracut-rebuild uses correct UUID.

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[–] krnl386@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 year ago (12 children)

I presume these are filesystem UUIDs. I also presume from your other post, that you used a live USB to fix nvidia drivers? Note that nvidia driver installers/packages trigger a initrd rebuild, and if you do that in a live environment, it’s possible that you will get the UUID of your live USB filesystem and not your actual boot drive… at least that’s my guess.

If you booted into a live USB you need to make sure that you chroot into your install on your disk whenever doing any operations on the boot loader. That involves mounting your actual disk (eg, /dev/nvme0p1) somewhere on the live USB (eg, /mnt/example), then bind-mounting the proc, sys, dev, tempfs filesystems under /mnt/example/proc, /mnt/example/sys, etc. You may also need to mount /efi under /mnt/example/efi or boot/efi (wherever you have it in your system). Next, chroot to /mnt/example. You should now have a fully functional install you normally boot into, with the only difference being that the kernel booted off the USB drive. Now you can try reinstalling drivers, rebuilding initrd, reconfiguring the bootloader, etc. Since you’re chrooted, the system should see the proper UUIDs, in theory…

If you want a more comprehensive tutorial on how to do this, look for bootloader fixing tutorials.

[–] Endrom@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I managed to find a problem and fix it. The problem was that /etc/kernel/cmd had the wrong UUID. Thanks for giving advice about initrd and bootloader reconfiguring, might not have found a solution without it.

[–] krnl386@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Ah, that would break things! Any idea how the incorrect UUID got into the kernel boot parameters?

[–] Endrom@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

It probably happened when I was messing with SSDs. I wanted a smaller one to be root and a bigger one as home.

Edit: Kind of happy that i managed to break something and fix it.

[–] krnl386@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

That is how you learn! Actually one of the best ways to learn, IMHO.

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