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Issue encountered during the setup of Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS onto an external storage device

Issue encountered during the setup of Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS onto an external storage device

M
MrJuddi
Member
125
11-16-2016, 10:11 AM
#1
I attempted to set up Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS on an external hard drive. After downloading the ISO from the official site and saving it to an 8GB USB flash drive, I followed these steps: 1. Restarted the computer and selected the USB drive with the ISO. 2. Tried Ubuntu and launched the desktop. 3. Clicked on the install button for Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS. 4. The system prompted an automatic update and allowed third-party software. 5. Noted there were two partitions: a 6GB swap area and the rest of the drive. 6. Decided to install the drive on the external hard drive and pressed the install button. 7. Waited, during which a message kept appearing: "grub-efi-amd64-signed failed installation /target/ Ubuntu 16.04". I’m unsure what’s causing the issue and need guidance. Anyone could assist, especially with DiskGenius partitioning or troubleshooting the installation. # help needed
M
MrJuddi
11-16-2016, 10:11 AM #1

I attempted to set up Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS on an external hard drive. After downloading the ISO from the official site and saving it to an 8GB USB flash drive, I followed these steps: 1. Restarted the computer and selected the USB drive with the ISO. 2. Tried Ubuntu and launched the desktop. 3. Clicked on the install button for Ubuntu 16.04.4 LTS. 4. The system prompted an automatic update and allowed third-party software. 5. Noted there were two partitions: a 6GB swap area and the rest of the drive. 6. Decided to install the drive on the external hard drive and pressed the install button. 7. Waited, during which a message kept appearing: "grub-efi-amd64-signed failed installation /target/ Ubuntu 16.04". I’m unsure what’s causing the issue and need guidance. Anyone could assist, especially with DiskGenius partitioning or troubleshooting the installation. # help needed

N
NeironG_YT
Junior Member
35
11-16-2016, 10:29 PM
#2
Find a bootable EFI drive to start your system.
N
NeironG_YT
11-16-2016, 10:29 PM #2

Find a bootable EFI drive to start your system.

E
Erls
Junior Member
27
11-21-2016, 10:18 PM
#3
still not figure why the error still appeare, I create a new partition in format of fat32 and edit its flag as boot, and a space in linux-swap of 6GB, also a partition of all left space as ext4. What should I do to install then. I chose the ext4 as "/" , linux-swap as swap, and do nothing about the boot fat32 space, then I press install, I chose to install at my external hard drive, then error again many time, I have been try for many time. Is there any setting I should be follow or something I missed. Please Help, I have no idea what the passage on internet talking about.
E
Erls
11-21-2016, 10:18 PM #3

still not figure why the error still appeare, I create a new partition in format of fat32 and edit its flag as boot, and a space in linux-swap of 6GB, also a partition of all left space as ext4. What should I do to install then. I chose the ext4 as "/" , linux-swap as swap, and do nothing about the boot fat32 space, then I press install, I chose to install at my external hard drive, then error again many time, I have been try for many time. Is there any setting I should be follow or something I missed. Please Help, I have no idea what the passage on internet talking about.

C
Coco42380
Junior Member
11
11-27-2016, 09:22 PM
#4
The text seems to reference something related to TAT, but the exact meaning is unclear without more context.
C
Coco42380
11-27-2016, 09:22 PM #4

The text seems to reference something related to TAT, but the exact meaning is unclear without more context.

R
robbie172
Member
63
11-27-2016, 11:09 PM
#5
Manual partitioning is often preferred because it gives you control over specific areas like swap space and the boot directory. You typically need to set up swap formatting and choose the /boot location for the kernel. The root folder, /home, is useful for separating personal files from system data.
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robbie172
11-27-2016, 11:09 PM #5

Manual partitioning is often preferred because it gives you control over specific areas like swap space and the boot directory. You typically need to set up swap formatting and choose the /boot location for the kernel. The root folder, /home, is useful for separating personal files from system data.

X
xXxdestroyxXx
Junior Member
3
11-28-2016, 03:18 AM
#6
You should use GParted for these tasks. Follow the guidelines it provides—there are specific steps and rules to adhere to.
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xXxdestroyxXx
11-28-2016, 03:18 AM #6

You should use GParted for these tasks. Follow the guidelines it provides—there are specific steps and rules to adhere to.

J
Juan2610
Posting Freak
875
11-28-2016, 05:32 AM
#7
In the installer you can set up the necessary partitions. Just create them, assign space as needed, and it should work. Refer to the link: https://askubuntu.com/questions/343268/h...stallation
J
Juan2610
11-28-2016, 05:32 AM #7

In the installer you can set up the necessary partitions. Just create them, assign space as needed, and it should work. Refer to the link: https://askubuntu.com/questions/343268/h...stallation

M
medbabe
Member
70
11-28-2016, 02:31 PM
#8
I understand now, it's just a simple process. I was overthinking the partition, but EFI format works fine. Thanks a lot for your help! 0-0
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medbabe
11-28-2016, 02:31 PM #8

I understand now, it's just a simple process. I was overthinking the partition, but EFI format works fine. Thanks a lot for your help! 0-0