External Hard drive will only boot on one computer

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2















I have an external drive with Linux Mint 18 on it. It boots to my desktop, which is where I used the live CD to install the OS onto the external drive. However, when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot.



Now, I changed the boot menu, made sure I set "Secure Boot" to disabled, and verified that "UEFI boot" is set to enabled, and I still cannot get the drive to boot. I used EasyBCD to install a grub, but that also puts me into the grub menu upon boot. I am not able to see the drive in windows explorer, but it is in the Manage Disks. I tried all of the EasyBCD grub options to no avail.



Am I missing something? I do not want to take a chance and install the grub from the command when it first boots, (I get this message: Minimal BASH-like line editing is supported. For the first word. TAB lists possible command completions. Anywhere else TAB Lists possible device or file complete) because I do not want to take that chance and wipe out my windows boot, or more. When I boot it to my desktop, I get the options from grub asking whether to boot to Linux or Windows.



What am I missing? Can I just add a grub through EasyBCD and if so, which procedure is it? I would like to get this grub on my laptop so that when it boots, I get the option to boot to either Linux or Windows when the drive is plugged in. I want to be able to install this drive to any computer and be able to boot into the Linux OS on this external drive. Even if I have to change the BOIS setting upon boot. That does not bother me.



I was also thinking of just reinstalling the live CD again, only this time, use my laptop to perform the install to "the same" external drive I have Linux Mint 18 on right now. Basically overwriting the OS to the same OS. This way, the grub is on my laptop as well.



However, when I do this, I was thinking about removing the two drives I have in the laptop before installing. My question about this is, "if I do remove the drives, will this work, because I didn't remove the drive from my desktop when I installed the initial OS on the external drive. Does this grub play a role within the C:/? Any help would be greatly appreciated.










share|improve this question
























  • Could you clarify what you mean by "when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot." How far in the boot does it get? Do you see GRUB? If so, and you remove "quiet" from the kernel command line, do you see boot logs? Etc.

    – derobert
    Apr 3 '17 at 16:39

















2















I have an external drive with Linux Mint 18 on it. It boots to my desktop, which is where I used the live CD to install the OS onto the external drive. However, when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot.



Now, I changed the boot menu, made sure I set "Secure Boot" to disabled, and verified that "UEFI boot" is set to enabled, and I still cannot get the drive to boot. I used EasyBCD to install a grub, but that also puts me into the grub menu upon boot. I am not able to see the drive in windows explorer, but it is in the Manage Disks. I tried all of the EasyBCD grub options to no avail.



Am I missing something? I do not want to take a chance and install the grub from the command when it first boots, (I get this message: Minimal BASH-like line editing is supported. For the first word. TAB lists possible command completions. Anywhere else TAB Lists possible device or file complete) because I do not want to take that chance and wipe out my windows boot, or more. When I boot it to my desktop, I get the options from grub asking whether to boot to Linux or Windows.



What am I missing? Can I just add a grub through EasyBCD and if so, which procedure is it? I would like to get this grub on my laptop so that when it boots, I get the option to boot to either Linux or Windows when the drive is plugged in. I want to be able to install this drive to any computer and be able to boot into the Linux OS on this external drive. Even if I have to change the BOIS setting upon boot. That does not bother me.



I was also thinking of just reinstalling the live CD again, only this time, use my laptop to perform the install to "the same" external drive I have Linux Mint 18 on right now. Basically overwriting the OS to the same OS. This way, the grub is on my laptop as well.



However, when I do this, I was thinking about removing the two drives I have in the laptop before installing. My question about this is, "if I do remove the drives, will this work, because I didn't remove the drive from my desktop when I installed the initial OS on the external drive. Does this grub play a role within the C:/? Any help would be greatly appreciated.










share|improve this question
























  • Could you clarify what you mean by "when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot." How far in the boot does it get? Do you see GRUB? If so, and you remove "quiet" from the kernel command line, do you see boot logs? Etc.

    – derobert
    Apr 3 '17 at 16:39













2












2








2








I have an external drive with Linux Mint 18 on it. It boots to my desktop, which is where I used the live CD to install the OS onto the external drive. However, when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot.



Now, I changed the boot menu, made sure I set "Secure Boot" to disabled, and verified that "UEFI boot" is set to enabled, and I still cannot get the drive to boot. I used EasyBCD to install a grub, but that also puts me into the grub menu upon boot. I am not able to see the drive in windows explorer, but it is in the Manage Disks. I tried all of the EasyBCD grub options to no avail.



Am I missing something? I do not want to take a chance and install the grub from the command when it first boots, (I get this message: Minimal BASH-like line editing is supported. For the first word. TAB lists possible command completions. Anywhere else TAB Lists possible device or file complete) because I do not want to take that chance and wipe out my windows boot, or more. When I boot it to my desktop, I get the options from grub asking whether to boot to Linux or Windows.



What am I missing? Can I just add a grub through EasyBCD and if so, which procedure is it? I would like to get this grub on my laptop so that when it boots, I get the option to boot to either Linux or Windows when the drive is plugged in. I want to be able to install this drive to any computer and be able to boot into the Linux OS on this external drive. Even if I have to change the BOIS setting upon boot. That does not bother me.



I was also thinking of just reinstalling the live CD again, only this time, use my laptop to perform the install to "the same" external drive I have Linux Mint 18 on right now. Basically overwriting the OS to the same OS. This way, the grub is on my laptop as well.



However, when I do this, I was thinking about removing the two drives I have in the laptop before installing. My question about this is, "if I do remove the drives, will this work, because I didn't remove the drive from my desktop when I installed the initial OS on the external drive. Does this grub play a role within the C:/? Any help would be greatly appreciated.










share|improve this question
















I have an external drive with Linux Mint 18 on it. It boots to my desktop, which is where I used the live CD to install the OS onto the external drive. However, when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot.



Now, I changed the boot menu, made sure I set "Secure Boot" to disabled, and verified that "UEFI boot" is set to enabled, and I still cannot get the drive to boot. I used EasyBCD to install a grub, but that also puts me into the grub menu upon boot. I am not able to see the drive in windows explorer, but it is in the Manage Disks. I tried all of the EasyBCD grub options to no avail.



Am I missing something? I do not want to take a chance and install the grub from the command when it first boots, (I get this message: Minimal BASH-like line editing is supported. For the first word. TAB lists possible command completions. Anywhere else TAB Lists possible device or file complete) because I do not want to take that chance and wipe out my windows boot, or more. When I boot it to my desktop, I get the options from grub asking whether to boot to Linux or Windows.



What am I missing? Can I just add a grub through EasyBCD and if so, which procedure is it? I would like to get this grub on my laptop so that when it boots, I get the option to boot to either Linux or Windows when the drive is plugged in. I want to be able to install this drive to any computer and be able to boot into the Linux OS on this external drive. Even if I have to change the BOIS setting upon boot. That does not bother me.



I was also thinking of just reinstalling the live CD again, only this time, use my laptop to perform the install to "the same" external drive I have Linux Mint 18 on right now. Basically overwriting the OS to the same OS. This way, the grub is on my laptop as well.



However, when I do this, I was thinking about removing the two drives I have in the laptop before installing. My question about this is, "if I do remove the drives, will this work, because I didn't remove the drive from my desktop when I installed the initial OS on the external drive. Does this grub play a role within the C:/? Any help would be greatly appreciated.







dual-boot grub external-hdd






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edited Apr 3 '17 at 16:42









terdon

134k33270450




134k33270450










asked Apr 3 '17 at 16:11









bri_rychebri_ryche

111




111












  • Could you clarify what you mean by "when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot." How far in the boot does it get? Do you see GRUB? If so, and you remove "quiet" from the kernel command line, do you see boot logs? Etc.

    – derobert
    Apr 3 '17 at 16:39

















  • Could you clarify what you mean by "when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot." How far in the boot does it get? Do you see GRUB? If so, and you remove "quiet" from the kernel command line, do you see boot logs? Etc.

    – derobert
    Apr 3 '17 at 16:39
















Could you clarify what you mean by "when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot." How far in the boot does it get? Do you see GRUB? If so, and you remove "quiet" from the kernel command line, do you see boot logs? Etc.

– derobert
Apr 3 '17 at 16:39





Could you clarify what you mean by "when I try to boot this external drive from my laptop, it will not boot." How far in the boot does it get? Do you see GRUB? If so, and you remove "quiet" from the kernel command line, do you see boot logs? Etc.

– derobert
Apr 3 '17 at 16:39










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














UPDATE



The issue occurred because the boot partition was not set on the external hard drive, but was set to the boot partition on the computers boot menu in the bios.



The solution to have an external bootable drive, with any Linux OS and Fedora is to disconnect the drives on the machine you are using. I tested this on from my laptop by installing both Linux Mint 18 and Fedora 25. I used the external hard drive connected through a USB port and installed the OS's of both systems. The external drives now boot when connected to both my laptop and desktop and when they are not connected, the installed OS boots as normal.



In essence, You were correct about the drivers installed were not the drivers to that specific OS on the external drive, but the real issue was the drivers were not on the external drive, but in the BIOS boot menu on the machine.



In short, remove internal drives and then hook up external and boot from CD to install any Linux or Fedora OS. Works now on any machine.






share|improve this answer
































    0














    Basically, the installation process installed drivers specific to your desktop onto the external hard drive. It doesn't matter that the hard drive is external. When you try to boot with this external drive connected to your laptop, the hardware drivers installed on the drive are incompatible with the laptop's hardware.



    If you want to have a bootable Linux that can be used with more than one computer, you need to boot directly from the live CD (without installing it) and use it as is. You can also create a bootable USB (don't forget to set your BIOS to allow booting from USB).



    The only downside to running from a live Linux image is that:



    1. If it's a live CD, there is no writable disk space to store files
      (only limited space mounted in RAM)

    2. If it's a live USB stick, there is limited writable disk space on
      the USB stick itself.

    In both cases above, you can always mount the desktop/laptop file system manually once your live Linux is up and running.






    share|improve this answer

























    • Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

      – bri_ryche
      Apr 3 '17 at 16:35











    • I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

      – derobert
      Apr 3 '17 at 16:36












    • I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

      – bri_ryche
      Apr 3 '17 at 17:02











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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

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    active

    oldest

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    0














    UPDATE



    The issue occurred because the boot partition was not set on the external hard drive, but was set to the boot partition on the computers boot menu in the bios.



    The solution to have an external bootable drive, with any Linux OS and Fedora is to disconnect the drives on the machine you are using. I tested this on from my laptop by installing both Linux Mint 18 and Fedora 25. I used the external hard drive connected through a USB port and installed the OS's of both systems. The external drives now boot when connected to both my laptop and desktop and when they are not connected, the installed OS boots as normal.



    In essence, You were correct about the drivers installed were not the drivers to that specific OS on the external drive, but the real issue was the drivers were not on the external drive, but in the BIOS boot menu on the machine.



    In short, remove internal drives and then hook up external and boot from CD to install any Linux or Fedora OS. Works now on any machine.






    share|improve this answer





























      0














      UPDATE



      The issue occurred because the boot partition was not set on the external hard drive, but was set to the boot partition on the computers boot menu in the bios.



      The solution to have an external bootable drive, with any Linux OS and Fedora is to disconnect the drives on the machine you are using. I tested this on from my laptop by installing both Linux Mint 18 and Fedora 25. I used the external hard drive connected through a USB port and installed the OS's of both systems. The external drives now boot when connected to both my laptop and desktop and when they are not connected, the installed OS boots as normal.



      In essence, You were correct about the drivers installed were not the drivers to that specific OS on the external drive, but the real issue was the drivers were not on the external drive, but in the BIOS boot menu on the machine.



      In short, remove internal drives and then hook up external and boot from CD to install any Linux or Fedora OS. Works now on any machine.






      share|improve this answer



























        0












        0








        0







        UPDATE



        The issue occurred because the boot partition was not set on the external hard drive, but was set to the boot partition on the computers boot menu in the bios.



        The solution to have an external bootable drive, with any Linux OS and Fedora is to disconnect the drives on the machine you are using. I tested this on from my laptop by installing both Linux Mint 18 and Fedora 25. I used the external hard drive connected through a USB port and installed the OS's of both systems. The external drives now boot when connected to both my laptop and desktop and when they are not connected, the installed OS boots as normal.



        In essence, You were correct about the drivers installed were not the drivers to that specific OS on the external drive, but the real issue was the drivers were not on the external drive, but in the BIOS boot menu on the machine.



        In short, remove internal drives and then hook up external and boot from CD to install any Linux or Fedora OS. Works now on any machine.






        share|improve this answer















        UPDATE



        The issue occurred because the boot partition was not set on the external hard drive, but was set to the boot partition on the computers boot menu in the bios.



        The solution to have an external bootable drive, with any Linux OS and Fedora is to disconnect the drives on the machine you are using. I tested this on from my laptop by installing both Linux Mint 18 and Fedora 25. I used the external hard drive connected through a USB port and installed the OS's of both systems. The external drives now boot when connected to both my laptop and desktop and when they are not connected, the installed OS boots as normal.



        In essence, You were correct about the drivers installed were not the drivers to that specific OS on the external drive, but the real issue was the drivers were not on the external drive, but in the BIOS boot menu on the machine.



        In short, remove internal drives and then hook up external and boot from CD to install any Linux or Fedora OS. Works now on any machine.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Mar 16 at 12:50









        Prajwal Dhatwalia

        31019




        31019










        answered Apr 12 '17 at 20:38









        bri_rychebri_ryche

        111




        111























            0














            Basically, the installation process installed drivers specific to your desktop onto the external hard drive. It doesn't matter that the hard drive is external. When you try to boot with this external drive connected to your laptop, the hardware drivers installed on the drive are incompatible with the laptop's hardware.



            If you want to have a bootable Linux that can be used with more than one computer, you need to boot directly from the live CD (without installing it) and use it as is. You can also create a bootable USB (don't forget to set your BIOS to allow booting from USB).



            The only downside to running from a live Linux image is that:



            1. If it's a live CD, there is no writable disk space to store files
              (only limited space mounted in RAM)

            2. If it's a live USB stick, there is limited writable disk space on
              the USB stick itself.

            In both cases above, you can always mount the desktop/laptop file system manually once your live Linux is up and running.






            share|improve this answer

























            • Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:35











            • I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

              – derobert
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:36












            • I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 17:02















            0














            Basically, the installation process installed drivers specific to your desktop onto the external hard drive. It doesn't matter that the hard drive is external. When you try to boot with this external drive connected to your laptop, the hardware drivers installed on the drive are incompatible with the laptop's hardware.



            If you want to have a bootable Linux that can be used with more than one computer, you need to boot directly from the live CD (without installing it) and use it as is. You can also create a bootable USB (don't forget to set your BIOS to allow booting from USB).



            The only downside to running from a live Linux image is that:



            1. If it's a live CD, there is no writable disk space to store files
              (only limited space mounted in RAM)

            2. If it's a live USB stick, there is limited writable disk space on
              the USB stick itself.

            In both cases above, you can always mount the desktop/laptop file system manually once your live Linux is up and running.






            share|improve this answer

























            • Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:35











            • I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

              – derobert
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:36












            • I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 17:02













            0












            0








            0







            Basically, the installation process installed drivers specific to your desktop onto the external hard drive. It doesn't matter that the hard drive is external. When you try to boot with this external drive connected to your laptop, the hardware drivers installed on the drive are incompatible with the laptop's hardware.



            If you want to have a bootable Linux that can be used with more than one computer, you need to boot directly from the live CD (without installing it) and use it as is. You can also create a bootable USB (don't forget to set your BIOS to allow booting from USB).



            The only downside to running from a live Linux image is that:



            1. If it's a live CD, there is no writable disk space to store files
              (only limited space mounted in RAM)

            2. If it's a live USB stick, there is limited writable disk space on
              the USB stick itself.

            In both cases above, you can always mount the desktop/laptop file system manually once your live Linux is up and running.






            share|improve this answer















            Basically, the installation process installed drivers specific to your desktop onto the external hard drive. It doesn't matter that the hard drive is external. When you try to boot with this external drive connected to your laptop, the hardware drivers installed on the drive are incompatible with the laptop's hardware.



            If you want to have a bootable Linux that can be used with more than one computer, you need to boot directly from the live CD (without installing it) and use it as is. You can also create a bootable USB (don't forget to set your BIOS to allow booting from USB).



            The only downside to running from a live Linux image is that:



            1. If it's a live CD, there is no writable disk space to store files
              (only limited space mounted in RAM)

            2. If it's a live USB stick, there is limited writable disk space on
              the USB stick itself.

            In both cases above, you can always mount the desktop/laptop file system manually once your live Linux is up and running.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Mar 16 at 12:51









            Prajwal Dhatwalia

            31019




            31019










            answered Apr 3 '17 at 16:24









            El StepherinoEl Stepherino

            112




            112












            • Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:35











            • I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

              – derobert
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:36












            • I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 17:02

















            • Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:35











            • I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

              – derobert
              Apr 3 '17 at 16:36












            • I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

              – bri_ryche
              Apr 3 '17 at 17:02
















            Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

            – bri_ryche
            Apr 3 '17 at 16:35





            Well, if the desktop installed drivers onto the external drive, can I not install the proper drivers for the laptop in order for it to boot from both the laptop and desktop? I know there is a way to get this external drive to fire up from both computers using the Linux mint OS that is on it. The file system is written to the external, I just need to be able to boot into that file system from both computers. If I reinstall the same OS from the same live CD on my laptop, that will install the proper drivers and grub on my desktop. This way both the desktop and laptop have proper grub. Maybe?

            – bri_ryche
            Apr 3 '17 at 16:35













            I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

            – derobert
            Apr 3 '17 at 16:36






            I'm not downvoting because I'm not sure what Mint does, but it's pretty common for Linux distros to install all the drivers on the initramfs, and then probe at boot which are needed and load those. So different machines (within reason, e.g., both x86_64) should boot from the same disk. On Debian, for example, it's set in /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf, via MODULES=most (generic) or MODULES=dep (this machine only). The default is most. Even if Mint defaults to machine-only, it's probably easy enough to change...

            – derobert
            Apr 3 '17 at 16:36














            I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

            – bri_ryche
            Apr 3 '17 at 17:02





            I am sure you are right in some aspect concerning your response. I know all about the limitations of the live CD or USB. This is a 2tb external, and it can act just like a system if configuration is right, and work for any machine upon boot, and the initramfs.config is set to = "Most". So this is what is confusing me. Like I said, even adding the grub from EasyBCD onto my boot-menu return no results, and this should also help in targeting the right boot. I appreciate your response.

            – bri_ryche
            Apr 3 '17 at 17:02

















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