F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Repair your operating system?

Repair your operating system?

Repair your operating system?

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P3kena
Junior Member
46
01-24-2026, 08:51 AM
#11
It includes an older version of Windows 7. I meant I can't exactly copy the drive in the faulty system; I'd need to link it to another functioning computer.
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P3kena
01-24-2026, 08:51 AM #11

It includes an older version of Windows 7. I meant I can't exactly copy the drive in the faulty system; I'd need to link it to another functioning computer.

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MCMaster2731
Junior Member
35
01-24-2026, 10:37 AM
#12
You could recreate Clonezilla using a live USB drive. Just stick with what feels safe for you.
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MCMaster2731
01-24-2026, 10:37 AM #12

You could recreate Clonezilla using a live USB drive. Just stick with what feels safe for you.

J
Jelly_Fluff
Member
54
01-31-2026, 08:35 AM
#13
Alright, once you decide then it’s just a matter of finding the right repair option. You’re not sure what to do, that’s okay.
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Jelly_Fluff
01-31-2026, 08:35 AM #13

Alright, once you decide then it’s just a matter of finding the right repair option. You’re not sure what to do, that’s okay.

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21Vid3oGam1ng
Member
73
01-31-2026, 09:15 AM
#14
CloneZilla is a live USB system designed to assist in duplicating your operating system across various storage devices. It's particularly useful when someone has an SSD but still uses a Windows installation on their older HDD. The tool encourages creating a backup of your OS to safely test files without any danger.
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21Vid3oGam1ng
01-31-2026, 09:15 AM #14

CloneZilla is a live USB system designed to assist in duplicating your operating system across various storage devices. It's particularly useful when someone has an SSD but still uses a Windows installation on their older HDD. The tool encourages creating a backup of your OS to safely test files without any danger.

H
herajuomat
Junior Member
12
01-31-2026, 10:42 AM
#15
Stay cool and then proceed with addressing your broken OS.
H
herajuomat
01-31-2026, 10:42 AM #15

Stay cool and then proceed with addressing your broken OS.

Z
zbob101
Junior Member
45
01-31-2026, 01:45 PM
#16
Need to repair the operating system?
Check for updates, run diagnostics, or reinstall if necessary.
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zbob101
01-31-2026, 01:45 PM #16

Need to repair the operating system?
Check for updates, run diagnostics, or reinstall if necessary.

G
GucciMixtape
Member
61
01-31-2026, 03:52 PM
#17
I really don't want to rebuild my site again... there should be a solution.
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GucciMixtape
01-31-2026, 03:52 PM #17

I really don't want to rebuild my site again... there should be a solution.

S
SilverCyclone
Member
101
01-31-2026, 09:51 PM
#18
Visit ubuntuforums.org for comprehensive details on the issues you're encountering and your upgrade process.
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SilverCyclone
01-31-2026, 09:51 PM #18

Visit ubuntuforums.org for comprehensive details on the issues you're encountering and your upgrade process.

G
Greytide
Member
159
02-01-2026, 02:37 AM
#19
Have you attempted a live USB or CD when the operating system failed, and did you extract the necessary files to possibly restart and then install the disk?
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Greytide
02-01-2026, 02:37 AM #19

Have you attempted a live USB or CD when the operating system failed, and did you extract the necessary files to possibly restart and then install the disk?

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sunemoonsong
Senior Member
380
02-01-2026, 03:47 AM
#20
Start the LiveDisk, set up the filesystem, and pull the data you require. Then simply reinstall the operating system if needed. Windows likely won’t handle the filesystem properly, making a LiveDisk for Ubuntu or similar ideal. By the way, using a LiveDisk lets you jump into chroot mode and try various repair methods. I’d recommend just fetching your files and installing fresh.

P.S. Keeping /home and / on separate partitions is a good practice—this way your system can fail while keeping important files safe on /home.
S
sunemoonsong
02-01-2026, 03:47 AM #20

Start the LiveDisk, set up the filesystem, and pull the data you require. Then simply reinstall the operating system if needed. Windows likely won’t handle the filesystem properly, making a LiveDisk for Ubuntu or similar ideal. By the way, using a LiveDisk lets you jump into chroot mode and try various repair methods. I’d recommend just fetching your files and installing fresh.

P.S. Keeping /home and / on separate partitions is a good practice—this way your system can fail while keeping important files safe on /home.

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