My experience has been is that dual boot has always been full of problems.
Instead of dual boot, you might consider making Leap 42.2 the only OS for
your computer, install VMWare Workstation Player 12.5 under Leap 42.2 and
then put Windows 10 in a virtual machine under VMWare Workstation Player
12.5. Since you have 2 hard drives, one could be the primary drive for Leap
42.2 and the other could be for the virtual machines that you would install
under VMWare Workstation Player 12.5.
I suspect that the Windows 10 upgrade did something that made Leap 42.2
unbootable, and that it could very well continue to do so as it continues
with its "mandatory" upgrades, even if your proposed reinstall of Leap 42.2
takes care of this current problem. Beyond that, Microsoft has shown no
respect for their customers' privacy or for what their customers' want to do
with their own computers, especially with Windows 10.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave Smith"
Had to rebuild my work computer, first motherboard ever to go out on me. Replaced with an ASRock H97 Pro4 board with an i5 processor and 4G of ram. Using the graphics from the i5 since it is just a work machine. Have 2 hard drives attached, one for Leap 42.2 and one for Windows.
I reinstalled Windows 7 first and then Leap 42.2. All was good. I then upgraded Windows to version 10. I have just discovered I can no longer boot into Leap. I select Leap 42.2 from the grub boot menu and it begins the boot process. The system goes into emergency mode just after successfully mounting all the file systems. I didn't even know there was an emergency mode. Kind of nice actually. I reviewed the journal but could not see anything obvious that would be causing this. No messages indicating why.
Any ideas? Could the Windows 10 upgrade have played a role in this somehow. I have done a couple of other upgrades without issue. I have not done much past the basic install so my next step will be a reinstall of Leap if no one can offer any insight.
Dave
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org