~~stoggle_buttons~~ ====== Windows ====== ===== Reparar la partición de arranque ===== diskpart DISKPART> select disk 0 DISKPART> create partition efi DISKPART> format [quick] fs=fat32 DISKPART> assign letter=B: DISKPART> exit bcdboot C:\Windows /s B: /f [ALL|UEFI|BIOS] ====== Linux ====== [[https://bugs.launchpad.net/systemback/+bug/1649056]] 1. Enter live mode 2. Unmount all partitions on media with umount /media/* 3. Make a ext4 partition named SB@ with label also SB@. Set the boot flag of that partition with GParted, for example. 4. Recreate the structure of the disk using hard links with a device name that systemback recognizes, as /dev/sdd. I have /dev/nvme0n1 as the actual disk and 7 partitions nvme0n1p1, nvme0n1p2, ... so the commands are: ln /dev/nvme0n1 /dev/sdd; for((i=1;i<=7;i++)) do ln /dev/nvme0n1p$i /dev/sdd$i; done 5. Then run systemback. You should be able to select the new ext4 partition to install the system. Step 3 may not be needed, but Systemback didn't see the free space on the disk so I made the SB@ partition