Is there a way to change the boot order BACK to SD Card FROM NVMe running Ubuntu 22? I can't find anything about it anywhere. I want to boot from my micro SD card again, because I want to use a different OS on the NVMe drive, because I have no other way of hooking up an NVMe drive to my regular computer. I tried simply unhooking the NVMe drive, but then my RPi5 does nothing... Just hangs. I do have a micro SD card in there with a functioning version of Raspberry Pi OS, I know this because I booted from a friends RPi5, from this SD card. Where in Ubuntu can I change the boot order? Please help!
Reflash the Firmware using the method in this video, BUT pick the version of Firmware that has the functionality you're looking for. Last I checked the Raspberry Fondation has a version of firmware that boots from SD, and one that boots from USB.
@@TechicallyTNT Yeah, but the problem is I am currently booting into my NVMe drive, and I want to go back to booting from my SD card. I have no way of hooking my NVMe drive up to any other device, and I'm pretty sure the imager software won't let me wipe the drive it's currently running from.
@@markantinozzi4970 Without a Working interface it will be hard if not impossible to re-flash your hardware with another supported firmware image. If you have a friends computer you can use, then I'd use it to download Raspberry PI's Version of Firmware that meets your needs, place it on a USB drive, or SD card, remove the NVMe from the pi, insert firmware media, and reflash it.
@@TechicallyTNT I've got a little update. So I did 'sudo apt install raspi-config', when I opened it, there was no option for boot order. So I tried editing the eeprom-config, and tried changing the boot order to 0xf416, 0xf214, but nothing changed. So, after trying a bunch of different things, I finally ended up unhooking the NVMe hat, reformatting a SD with the RPi5 bootloader, booted up with that, reformatted the same SD card with PI OS, hooked the NVMe hat back up, and it made it through the initial install just fine, after updating PI OS, it restarted to apply the updates, but it kept repeating the same lines of code, instead of booting into the OS. I turned off the power and tried rebooting it again, and now it boots to SD first, then USB, then NVMe. They all boot fine. I tried installing Linux MX, it failed, tried tried installing Slax, failed, Twister OS, failed, tried PINN Lite, failed... but it seems to be putting PI OS on the NVMe drive now... Which I hope I'm limited to PI OS or Ubarftu, but if those are my options, I'd rather have PI OS. I'm trying to decide if I like Ubarftu or Upooptu better... I think I'm going to stick with Upooptu.
I need to get a RP5, this would be extremely helpful for future projects! Great stuff as always brother!
Thanks man. Trying to get RetroPie on it right now.
Dramatic 😊😊 Thank you!
Glad you found it informative. Thanks for checking out the video.
Good video thanks!
Thank You for checking it out. I hope it is helpful.
Is there a way to change the boot order BACK to SD Card FROM NVMe running Ubuntu 22? I can't find anything about it anywhere. I want to boot from my micro SD card again, because I want to use a different OS on the NVMe drive, because I have no other way of hooking up an NVMe drive to my regular computer. I tried simply unhooking the NVMe drive, but then my RPi5 does nothing... Just hangs. I do have a micro SD card in there with a functioning version of Raspberry Pi OS, I know this because I booted from a friends RPi5, from this SD card. Where in Ubuntu can I change the boot order? Please help!
Reflash the Firmware using the method in this video, BUT pick the version of Firmware that has the functionality you're looking for. Last I checked the Raspberry Fondation has a version of firmware that boots from SD, and one that boots from USB.
@@TechicallyTNT Yeah, but the problem is I am currently booting into my NVMe drive, and I want to go back to booting from my SD card. I have no way of hooking my NVMe drive up to any other device, and I'm pretty sure the imager software won't let me wipe the drive it's currently running from.
@@markantinozzi4970 Without a Working interface it will be hard if not impossible to re-flash your hardware with another supported firmware image.
If you have a friends computer you can use, then I'd use it to download Raspberry PI's Version of Firmware that meets your needs, place it on a USB drive, or SD card, remove the NVMe from the pi, insert firmware media, and reflash it.
@@TechicallyTNT I've got a little update. So I did 'sudo apt install raspi-config', when I opened it, there was no option for boot order. So I tried editing the eeprom-config, and tried changing the boot order to 0xf416, 0xf214, but nothing changed. So, after trying a bunch of different things, I finally ended up unhooking the NVMe hat, reformatting a SD with the RPi5 bootloader, booted up with that, reformatted the same SD card with PI OS, hooked the NVMe hat back up, and it made it through the initial install just fine, after updating PI OS, it restarted to apply the updates, but it kept repeating the same lines of code, instead of booting into the OS. I turned off the power and tried rebooting it again, and now it boots to SD first, then USB, then NVMe. They all boot fine. I tried installing Linux MX, it failed, tried tried installing Slax, failed, Twister OS, failed, tried PINN Lite, failed... but it seems to be putting PI OS on the NVMe drive now... Which I hope I'm limited to PI OS or Ubarftu, but if those are my options, I'd rather have PI OS. I'm trying to decide if I like Ubarftu or Upooptu better... I think I'm going to stick with Upooptu.
Glad you got it figured out brother. Great news.
i am the first to comment
Love you, BUT your a dork Dude.
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The Free unlicensed selection doesn't have many options lol. ..... Thank you for the comment..... I guess... lol