These instructions assume that you have purchased a Dell computer with an Ubuntu recovery partition already installed.
You can find the instructions for this process below. However, your machine must be in a working condition for this to work. It is best to do this before you load any information onto the computer.
This Operating System reinstall option is used to restore the computer to its original factory settings from a partition on your Hard Drive.
Restart your computer. Press the ESC key once after you see the Dell logo to invoke the Grand Unified Bootloader (GRUB) menu on computers with a Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) BIOS. (You may need several attempts at this. It is common to press the key more than once and have the computer skip GRUB and go to a command prompt.)
Choose Restore OS to Factory State.
Choose Restore Linux OS partitions and click Continue.
The computer runs the OEM Configuration Wizard when it is finished. This allows you to choose language and location, time zone, keyboard layout, and first user.
GRUB2
. You can try to either repair or to recover the installation from this option.
Restart the computer and tap rapidly on the F12 key, when you see the Dell logo appear. Select the CD drive, DVD drive, or USB drive from the boot once menu that appears. Whichever is appropriate to the media that you have.
The boot menu is similar to an Ubuntu disk. Choose the appropriate recovery option:
Restore Entire Hard Drive - causes all your data to be erased. This is the closest to a factory installation.
Restore only Linux OS Partition.
The installation proceeds, and you see an on-screen prompt to complete the first-time setup process.
You should switch to the following Dell Knowledge Base article for the latest information and instructions on this topic:
When an upgrade or driver has failed, sometimes reinstalling the operating system is the quickest way to solve the problem.
When reinstalling, the two things you want to keep are:
Starting with Version 8.04 you can reinstall the Ubuntu operating system without losing the content of the /home
folder. (The folder that contains program settings, Internet bookmarks, emails and all your documents, music, videos, and other user files.) This can be done even if /home
is not on a separate partition. (Which is the case by default if you did not manually separate it when installing Ubuntu originally.)
/home
hidden files) on external media.
/home
folder which contains all your files and settingsRun the Ubuntu installer.
Follow the prompts until the Installation type (or Allocate disk space) menu.
Choose manual partitioning (Something-else option), then select Ubuntu partition, set its mount point as /. Be sure to keep the same format type, the same size, and untick the Format checkbox or it deletes all the data! Set any other partitions (/boot
, /home
) as needed.
Then finish the installation process. (This may take several hours, like a normal install)
After reinstalling, user accounts must be re-created with the same login and password.
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