James Knott composed on 2014-11-10 23:19 (UTC-0500):
It's Windows 7 and has 3 primary partitions. I created an extended partition to hold /, /home and swap.
However, I just did an install, not upgrade to 13.2, so that I could get the computer working for tomorrow. I can now boot into both Linux and Windows, so I can now go to bed and to work tomorrow.
\o/
BTW, I noticed the boot menu screen looks different between the install and upgrade versions,
If you had upgraded to 13.1 from 12.3, and to 12.3 from 12.2, almost certainly you were using Grub Legacy, not Grub2. Those upgrades would not have replaced Grub Legacy with Grub2 unless you took intentional steps to have that done.
but that sda1 recovery partition is still listed. I'd like to know how to remove that.
Edit /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober have Grub ignore it, then rebuild the Grub menu.
When I have time, I can try restoring that 13.1 system, if the problems remain in 13.2. -- "The wise are known for their understanding, and pleasant words are persuasive." Proverbs 16:21 (New Living Translation)
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