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- HP Community
- Notebooks
- Notebook Operating System and Recovery
- How to dual boot ubuntu and windows 8?

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11-29-2014 04:04 AM
I have been battling to dual boot a number of linux's without success. If all this is true then the HP-15-n265sa I purchased is not fit for purpose and I'm done with HP. I need to re-check the details of the HP license, as far as I'm concerned this feature is a restraint, if I had known this from the get-go I also would have purchased another brand.
12-28-2014 12:43 PM
this did not solve anything for me. i would post my solution some other way but don't know how. this worked
i did not disable secre boot nor fastboot
i did uncheck time to
@hprageuser wrote:Hp envy 6 sleekbook 6z 1100
I have already disable the secure boot in the BIOS
But I still cannot install the ubuntu 13.04
The installation was good and smooth
But after reboot, there is no boot menu appear for me to choose which OS I want to boot
I wonder if HP locked something.........:( or should I turn on Legacy support in the BIOS? But ubuntu 13.04 should support EFL BIOS
I need Ubuntu for work!
this is for an HP Envy TS Notebook PC
OK after months of trying Success! 1st im still somewhat of a noob although ive using Ubuntu since 2006.
1st I tried everything else: (none of this worked)
1.disable secure boot, and fastboot
2.legacy mode Was able to get to grub through bios (which to me is not dual booting proper
3.mounting Ubuntu to efi partition --same thing as 2
4.creating a separate boot partition --didn't work
5.easybcd was no help
6.boot-repair no help
and 7. I became fed up with the hole thing and installed Ubuntu wiping out windows altogether.
then I read on various places on the internet you don’t have to disable secure boot and easybcd wont work with UEFI. also trying to fix it with boot-repair will only make matters worse (which it did in my case)..
soo.. after reading this I decided I would give it one more try..
so I took my backup copy of windows 8 and reinstalled windows
and it came up with a funky choose "windows 8.1" or "HP update and recovery" as separate OS's
which i found annoying so decided to get rid of the HP choice and
went into system settings using the file browser
and under "this pc" (right click)/ advanced system settings/ startup and recovery - I unchecked "time to display list of OS's" to get rid of HP recovery option.
I then installed UbuntuGnome on a separate partition using the "something else" option
and used the windows boot loader: dev/sda and the result was it worked!
I’m not sure which or all of the steps that are necessary. I will investigate and keep you posted
12-28-2014 05:30 PM
Well good luck, glad you got somewhere. The point is none of this should be necessary, the specification, performance and utility of the equipment was knowingly misrepresented by HP, in that important information relating to the performance of the equipment was deliberately witheld from consumers, who, had they been aware of this feature of the equipment may have chosen a more suitable alternative. We've been conned plain and simple.
10-09-2015 09:25 PM
I found that on my HP Pavilion 15-f039wm laptop, that I actually could use BIOS settings to persistently get the Ubuntu Grub boot menu without pressing F9. However it wasn't obvious how to do that.
I use F10 to get the BIOS Settings, then cursor to and press Enter to select "BIOS Options". There is shows a UEFI Boot Order section with varios options that can be rearranged with F5/F6. The 'hidden feature' is that if I highlighted the option for "OS Boot Manager" and pressed Enter, I got a pop-up that showed entries for "ubuntu" and "Windows Boot Manager". I use F5/F6 to put "ubuntu" on top, then press F10 to save and close the pop-up. Press F10 again to save and exit from BIOS Settings.
Now without any intervention, the machine boots to the Grub Menu and from there, to Ubuntu. I can also boot to Windows from the Grub Menu, or get a secure boot pressing F9 and power on, which gives me the UEFI Boot Manager menu with options for ubuntu and Windows boot manager.
Now I understand that it was those BIOS settings that kept the UEFI BootOrder that I set in Ubuntu with efibootmgr from persisting to the next boot.
11-28-2015 06:31 PM
Please follow this tutorial
http://linux-ultimate.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-ultimate-guide-to-dual-boot-linux.html
12-13-2016 04:17 PM
I was able to get it to run without disabling Fast Boot / Secure Boot / enabling legacy Boot.
To do that:
1. Installed Ubuntu to EFI partition
2. Shut down, pressed F10 on boot
3. In system configuration, you can see the boot order
4. A triangle should appear on the OS boot option, which means you can access its sub menu. Press ENTER (this was the part I was having trouble getting)
5. Windows Boot Manager and Ubuntu should show up. Switch the orders with F5/F6 and press F10 to save and exit the sub menu
6. Press F10 again
7. ???
8. Profit
07-05-2017 05:27 AM
I have dual booted hp desktops and laptops many times. When you resize the windows partition do not format it. just leave it as unpartitioned space and the installer for ubuntu will see it and offer the install along side windows option. however you may have to change the efi boot order in the bios to get the grub2 menu.