I'm running Win7, Kubuntu 14.04 and 17.10, all installed on a 500GB Samsung SSD.
After some initial (btrfs) problems with this system I returned to ext4 for the two Linux installs and are very happy with 17.10.
Until I decided to boot into Win7 to do it's updates.
Rebooting to 17.10 was no longer possible, it stopped with an initframs message about "a tmp error occored reading a pcr value".
In other words, the HD partition was corrupted.
I was able to reboot into 14.04 but fsck returned the error I would need a newer version of e2fsck because of a metadata corruption.
A look around the net told me this can be caused by having ext2fsd installed on Windows, it is no longer compatible with the newer ext4.
Booting up a USB drive with 17.10 did give me the correct version of tools to get the boot and home partitions fixed.
After some initial (btrfs) problems with this system I returned to ext4 for the two Linux installs and are very happy with 17.10.
Until I decided to boot into Win7 to do it's updates.
Rebooting to 17.10 was no longer possible, it stopped with an initframs message about "a tmp error occored reading a pcr value".
In other words, the HD partition was corrupted.
I was able to reboot into 14.04 but fsck returned the error I would need a newer version of e2fsck because of a metadata corruption.
A look around the net told me this can be caused by having ext2fsd installed on Windows, it is no longer compatible with the newer ext4.
Booting up a USB drive with 17.10 did give me the correct version of tools to get the boot and home partitions fixed.
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