cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/6734778
My laptop is (maybe was) Linux and Windows 10 dual booted. I was reinstalling the Linux OS and in the process I accidentally formatted the Windows 10 boot partition. At least I think it is the boot partition because I don’t really know how Windows works (or doesn’t work amirite).
This is the lsblk output:
$ lsblk -f NAME FSTYPE FSVER LABEL [...] MOUNTPOINTS nvme1n1 zfs_member 5000 zroot [...] ├─nvme1n1p1 vfat FAT32 [...] /boot/efi ├─nvme1n1p2 swap 1 [...] [SWAP] └─nvme1n1p3 zfs_member 5000 zroot [...] nvme0n1 ├─nvme0n1p1 └─nvme0n1p2 ntfs
The
nvme0n1p1
is the one related to booting. I accidentally formatted it.I have a Windows 10 USB prepared. I tried looking online and I never found a question asking exactly for this. The ones I found that were similar enough suggested different commands.
Anyone has experience with this?
Thanks in advance.
in some distros os-prober may be disabled by default (because of security reasons iirc, I don’t know why it would be unsecure) or you may need to mount the windows partition begore running os-prober
for example in arch os-prober only checks mounted partitions
you can try mounting your windows partition to /mnt or somewhere else where you have an empty folder before running os-prober