@jojopi's suggestion should fix this, provided you haven't changed the order of the partitions.
Alternatively, within PINN, you can go to the maintenance menu, select both of your OSes and then "re-run partition script" from the fixup menu. (Try this first, if it doesn't work, you can edit the files manually as jojopi suggested)
If PINN cannot boot any of your OSes, you may also have to edit installed_os.json (on partition 5) in a similar way to fix up the partuuids there as well.
P.S. PINN does not support adding additional OSes, except by using ProjectSpaces. You can do it manually as you have tried, but you need to know how PINN works to do this correctly and have some knowledge of the partition relationships. There is some useful information on PINN's wiki page and in the user guide README_PINN.md to help you with this.
To add another OS, you will have to manually edit installed_os.json and manually fixup the OS's cmdline.txt and /etc/fstab files.
Alternatively, within PINN, you can go to the maintenance menu, select both of your OSes and then "re-run partition script" from the fixup menu. (Try this first, if it doesn't work, you can edit the files manually as jojopi suggested)
If PINN cannot boot any of your OSes, you may also have to edit installed_os.json (on partition 5) in a similar way to fix up the partuuids there as well.
P.S. PINN does not support adding additional OSes, except by using ProjectSpaces. You can do it manually as you have tried, but you need to know how PINN works to do this correctly and have some knowledge of the partition relationships. There is some useful information on PINN's wiki page and in the user guide README_PINN.md to help you with this.
To add another OS, you will have to manually edit installed_os.json and manually fixup the OS's cmdline.txt and /etc/fstab files.
Statistics: Posted by procount — Tue Nov 12, 2024 8:53 am