![]() You need an installation USB drive and a target USB drive. move away EFI/ubuntu and EFI/Boot from your PC's EFI directory, so you can restore your PC boot to the initial state.ĭetailed version - for less experienced users copy recursively the directories EFI/ubuntu and EFI/Boot from your PC's EFI partition to the USB's EFI partition/directory. create the missing EFI directory on the (empty) USB's fat32 EFI partition Normally the install will not break the existing Win10 boot. You need to move the 2 new directories to the USB drive, in the EFI partition. The bug is that Ubuntu installer will not install any EFI/Grub files on the USB drive, but it will put them on your first hard drive - for example in the EFI partition created by Win10. set target boot location on the USB device - like /dev/sdc, not a partition. ![]() use custom Ubuntu installing ("Something else"), booting in UEFI mode ![]() create second partition ext4 on the rest of the space.create first partition fat32 of 100MB, set the flags 'esp' and 'boot'.format the target USB drive with "gpt" partition table (not msdos).
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