Score:0

How can I install Ubuntu in a laptop with ATA disk?

gd flag

I started to install Ubuntu from USB pen-drive, all was going well letting the installation program to make the decisions. But after setting my geographical address did appear the following message: "The attempt to mount a file system partition type vfat in SCSI1 (0,0,0) partition #1 (sda) at /boot/efi failed.". When gave me the option to abort or continue... I chose to continue, and it was running for a whole day doing nothing... I aborted. And I don't know what to do to install Ubuntu.

My laptop is Asustek Computer X555QA with 8GB RAM, processor AMD A12-9720p radeon, and 128 GB disk. No other disks connected.

Device information: (from Gparted) Model: ATA Sandisk SD9SB8W1, serial 184902A00DF2, Size: 119.24 GiB, Path: /dev/sda Partition table: gpt, Heads: 255, Cylinders: 490332, Ttal sectors: 250069680, sector size: 512 BIOS information: Disk: (same as Gparted information) SATA Mode: AHCI (can be change to IDE) UEFI network stack: disable (can be change to enable)

Zeiss Ikon avatar
cn flag
Can you boot to the Live USB session, start Gparted, and copy off the properties of the physical drive you're installing to? Once done, please [edit] that into the question. Also, what option (one of the "guided" or "Manual") did you choose for partition setup, and if Manual, how did you set up partitions and select them for mounting and formatting?
hu flag
What is "SCSI disk"? Is it from 1994?
Joepie Es avatar
eg flag
After googling for the laptop I found out that the harddrive is an 1TB Toshiba MQ01ABD100. This is a SATA2 drive. Not a SCSI drive. Notebookcheck.net however states a 256 GB drive. Can you give us information to what harddrive you have in there? Personally I think there is no SCSI drive in a notebook. You should have a SATA drive in it.
HomerSimpson avatar
sa flag
@Joepie Es and @ mikewhatever. I think you are right. In a modern netbook there should not be a SCSI drive. It should be a SATA drive. In this case apparently a 128 GB ( guess an SSD ).
oldfred avatar
cn flag
Ubuntu Ubiquity installer wants an ESP - efi system partition (FAT32 with boot,esp flags) on first drive. So if not installing to first drive, you have to do a work around or have an ESP on first drive for it to work. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+bug/1396379 Others suggest disconnecting all other drives physically or logically in UEFI settings, so install drive is first drive. Or removing boot flag/esp flag from first drive, so only ESP is install drive.
Martin avatar
gd flag
All of you are right. I was deceive by the text of the error message into believe that was a SCSI disk, I already edit the question and added information that you asked.
karel avatar
sa flag
Does this answer your question? [The attempt to mount a file system with type vfat in SCSI1 (0,0,0), partition #1 (sda) at /boot/efi failed](https://askubuntu.com/questions/1331303/the-attempt-to-mount-a-file-system-with-type-vfat-in-scsi1-0-0-0-partition-1)
Martin avatar
gd flag
Interesting to know about the secure boot. It was enabled, I disable it.
Martin avatar
gd flag
The installation program still cannot continue, it suggested me to use the partitioning menu in order to continue, I am not going to do that without guidance. Before learning about partitioning I am going to try the formatting process suggested in your link.
Score:1
gd flag

SOLVED! I successfully installed Ubuntu in two easy steps, thanks to Karel: Step 1: In BIOS turn Secure Boot to disable. Step 2: In Geparted - Device - Create a Partition Table. After that Install Ubuntu with no other problem. thank you very much!

I sit in a Tesla and translated this thread with Ai:

mangohost

Post an answer

Most people don’t grasp that asking a lot of questions unlocks learning and improves interpersonal bonding. In Alison’s studies, for example, though people could accurately recall how many questions had been asked in their conversations, they didn’t intuit the link between questions and liking. Across four studies, in which participants were engaged in conversations themselves or read transcripts of others’ conversations, people tended not to realize that question asking would influence—or had influenced—the level of amity between the conversationalists.