Hello @fabian
As requested opening a new thread
I ran the 8to9 script and all reported okay and I followed the documentation step by step. At the final step I rebooted and now the system goes to the bios. I can see grub flash in the corner “Welcome to Grub!” for about 1 second before it goes back to bios. Loaded up a iso and my pve partition lvm is there and fine but when I mount the efi/esp partition it has no kernel parameters and when I review the /etc/kernel/proxmox-boot-uuids file on my root partition it only has the disk identifier in the file and no other details.
System is not a part of a cluster. Just a standalone deployment with a default ext4 lvm setup from a proxmox 8 iso install. This was a non-critical deployment and I have extensive backups and a lot of experience restoring broken proxmox installs, but I just haven’t sat down to repair it or do a fresh install and just restore the workloads. Im sure loading a proxmox 9 iso and repairing the efi/esp partition with proxmox-boot-tool would do the trick.
As requested opening a new thread
I ran the 8to9 script and all reported okay and I followed the documentation step by step. At the final step I rebooted and now the system goes to the bios. I can see grub flash in the corner “Welcome to Grub!” for about 1 second before it goes back to bios. Loaded up a iso and my pve partition lvm is there and fine but when I mount the efi/esp partition it has no kernel parameters and when I review the /etc/kernel/proxmox-boot-uuids file on my root partition it only has the disk identifier in the file and no other details.
System is not a part of a cluster. Just a standalone deployment with a default ext4 lvm setup from a proxmox 8 iso install. This was a non-critical deployment and I have extensive backups and a lot of experience restoring broken proxmox installs, but I just haven’t sat down to repair it or do a fresh install and just restore the workloads. Im sure loading a proxmox 9 iso and repairing the efi/esp partition with proxmox-boot-tool would do the trick.