With Manjaro and manjaro-chroot
these step are unnecessary, as well as these:
Manjaro is that awesome yeah!
Edit:
The same steps, or no, the same end result:
-
Ensure you’ve got a relatively new ISO or at least one with an LTS kernel.
-
Write/copy/
dd
the ISO to a USB thumb drive. -
When done, boot with the above mentioned USB thumb drive into the live environment.
-
Once booted, open a terminal and enter the following command to enter the
chroot
environment:
manjaro-chroot -a
- If you have more than one Linux installation, select the correct one to use from the list provided.
When done, you should now be in the chroot
environment.
But, be careful, as you’re now in an actual root
environment on your computer, so any changes you make will persist after a restart.
Once in the live environment, you have to reinstall GRUB. To do so, run the following:
update-grub
When successfully completed, exit the chroot
environment:
exit
Followed by rebooting and seeing if it worked.
If it did, feel free to heap on the praise. If, however, it didn’t, well, then I’m not here. (Mostly, I suspect, I’ll have to be off then.)