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28 sty 2022 · When I start Ubuntu it will boot and begin loading then eventually a black screen with the Ubuntu logo on the bottom. It will usually stay indefinitely on this unless I hard reset it and boot the VM again. If I reset about 10-20 times SUCCESS we get the login screen!
- [Solved] Guest doesn't boot up. I only get a black screen
The Ubuntu VM doesn't just have a black screen, it seems to...
- Ubuntu Linux 20.04 stuck on Black screen with Ubuntu Logo after boot
scottgus1 wrote: try the 6.1.35 test build. scottgus1 wrote:...
- [Solved] Guest doesn't boot up. I only get a black screen
22 paź 2020 · This is how I troubleshoot a non-starting Ubuntu in Virtual Box (assuming optimal settings for a virtual machine were already made): Make sure you had installed the most recent version of Virtual Box. Try a reboot by entering a TTY terminal (Host + F1) sudo reboot. Update the guest OS from TTY (Host + F1):
11 lis 2020 · Boot into recovery mode. Turn on your virtual machine. Quickly press and hold the Shift key, which will bring up the GNU GRUB menu. Select the line which starts with Advanced options. Select the line ending with " (recovery mode)"
The Ubuntu VM doesn't just have a black screen, it seems to be making no attempt to boot at all. The VM however is running just fine, waiting for Ubuntu to spring to life. I think you should treat this as an Ubuntu corrupted boot sectors problem and run the appropriate boot repair tools.
11 paź 2020 · I'm running Ubuntu Desktop 18.04/20.04 LTS as a guest in Virtualbox on a Windows 10 host with multiple physical screens connected to the host. Every time I boot the Ubuntu VM it comes to a black screen, i.e. no feedback.
14 paź 2022 · I just resized my Ubuntu VM Disk space cause it was running low on it. I did it in the VirtualBox GUI but after resizing I couldn´t fully boot ubuntu anymore. A blackscreen stays after the loading icon and ubuntu title on the bottom of the screen. I cant revert the resizing.
10 lip 2022 · scottgus1 wrote: try the 6.1.35 test build. scottgus1 wrote: Ubuntu is known to go blackscreen if there is not enough free disk space to start the desktop environment. This happens in real PCs too. The solution is to log on text-only and delete stuff until the desktop environment can start.