Since I already had an existing EFI system partition, I skipped the steps used to create and format the partition and only run the following steps: described how to create a lost EFI partition from an installation media. Once the command has finished its execution, I rebooted from the newly created Windows installation drive (by changing the UEFI boot order in BIOS) and landed in the Windows installation screen. $ sudo woeusb -target-filesystem NTFS -device Win10_20H2_v2_French_圆4.iso /dev/sdb It is important that this USB drive contains no useful data since the filesystem will be completely overwritten by the Windows ISO image.Īs shown in the following command output, my USB drive is detected as the new device /dev/sdb: Since the image uses around 6GB disk space, I got a 16GB USB drive to make sure I have enough disk space for the ISO image. The Windows 10 ISO can be downloaded from the Microsoft website. The first step is to create a bootable USB drive for Windows 10. As I mentioned before, this partition was initially a System partition managed by Windows, but since I formatted the partition during my Linux installation, I now need to restore my Windows Boot Manager files on the partition in order to be able to boot both Windows 10 and Linux. Here, the interesting partition is /dev/sda1, which is the EFI system mounted as /boot for my Linux installation. The other partitions are managed by the Windows installation: /dev/sda2 is a Microsoft reserved partition and both /dev/sda4 and /dev/sda6 are recovery partitions ( Windows RE) automatically created by Windows 10. dev/sda6 1951475712 1953523711 2048000 1000M Windows recovery environmentĪs you can see, my Linux filesystem is /dev/sda5 and my Windows filesystem is /dev/sda3.
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