Edit: solved. Sorry guys, it was something silly. Instead of clicking shutdown on windows I just hard pressed the off button for some seconds on the laptop. So I booted back on windows and let it shutdown normally and then Debian was able to boot again. Hehe
So I’ve made a clean install of Debian 12 when it came out and have been using only it exclusively for this time. But I had Windows 10 on dual boot already since when I was using Debian 11, I just never booted on Windows until now.
I had to fill in some PDF documents and ended up having to go to windows and use Adobe Acrobat there because LibreOffice and google docs kept messing up the PDF files when I tried to add text to them.
So I did my thing on windows and finished it all just now and then rebooted and tried to boot my Debian 12 and it won’t boot. All I see is:
/dev/sda11: recovering journal
/dev/sda11: clean […] files, […] blocks
And it is stuck here forever. I already tried to reboot multiple times.
I did nothing on windows to mess with the Linux partitions btw. Only chrome / acrobat / and I sent the files to google drive (so I didn’t even try to copy them directly into the Linux partition or anything).
Please tell me I did not brick my OS and need a clean stall pls. What can I try? The answers I’ve tried from google don’t work.
It is Debian 12 stable with nothing but software from the official stable repositories and flatpak.
I have a VM set up with single GPU pass through from fedora 40 and it works well. I also have win10 and 11 installs on dedicated disks for testing purposes (IHV).
I tend to bounce between them depending on what I need to do. In terms of a ‘traditional’ multi boot scenario, isolating OS installs to their own disks rarely results in any problems unless you attempt to install Windows with other systems / disks present on SATA 0 (for example)
You mean you’re running the VMs direct from disk? That’s something I’ve been wanting to do for a while but just never did… no reason, just haven’t done it. Do you see any performance difference versus a virtual disk?
Sorry no, I meant I use my VFIO setup on the fedora 40 disk, but also have conventional win10 and 11 installs on their own SATA SSDs.
The Win10 VM I have within vfio practically has transparent performance (I don’t allocate all threads to it, however), but it’s not always suitable for the types of hardware I need to test.