I have trouble finding my Windows drive on Ubuntu 18.04












1















I'm totally new to Ubuntu 18.04 Ubuntu. oh it's fun so far.
I booted Ubuntu using external SSD (NOT dual boot), and tried to find my Windows 10. but failed.
My laptop is Dell XPS 13 9350.
Could you help me find my drive? I spent a lot of time on this, But was not able to find proper solutions.



Output of lsblk:



Screenshot










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    The lsblk command will show you the atached devices. Your Windows drive will probably be there. To access the files the Windows file system will need to be mounted. Use df to see whether or not it is already mounted.

    – Jos
    Feb 2 at 15:53
















1















I'm totally new to Ubuntu 18.04 Ubuntu. oh it's fun so far.
I booted Ubuntu using external SSD (NOT dual boot), and tried to find my Windows 10. but failed.
My laptop is Dell XPS 13 9350.
Could you help me find my drive? I spent a lot of time on this, But was not able to find proper solutions.



Output of lsblk:



Screenshot










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    The lsblk command will show you the atached devices. Your Windows drive will probably be there. To access the files the Windows file system will need to be mounted. Use df to see whether or not it is already mounted.

    – Jos
    Feb 2 at 15:53














1












1








1








I'm totally new to Ubuntu 18.04 Ubuntu. oh it's fun so far.
I booted Ubuntu using external SSD (NOT dual boot), and tried to find my Windows 10. but failed.
My laptop is Dell XPS 13 9350.
Could you help me find my drive? I spent a lot of time on this, But was not able to find proper solutions.



Output of lsblk:



Screenshot










share|improve this question
















I'm totally new to Ubuntu 18.04 Ubuntu. oh it's fun so far.
I booted Ubuntu using external SSD (NOT dual boot), and tried to find my Windows 10. but failed.
My laptop is Dell XPS 13 9350.
Could you help me find my drive? I spent a lot of time on this, But was not able to find proper solutions.



Output of lsblk:



Screenshot







boot hard-drive






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 2 at 18:25









Kulfy

4,97651744




4,97651744










asked Feb 2 at 15:47









고경주고경주

61




61








  • 1





    The lsblk command will show you the atached devices. Your Windows drive will probably be there. To access the files the Windows file system will need to be mounted. Use df to see whether or not it is already mounted.

    – Jos
    Feb 2 at 15:53














  • 1





    The lsblk command will show you the atached devices. Your Windows drive will probably be there. To access the files the Windows file system will need to be mounted. Use df to see whether or not it is already mounted.

    – Jos
    Feb 2 at 15:53








1




1





The lsblk command will show you the atached devices. Your Windows drive will probably be there. To access the files the Windows file system will need to be mounted. Use df to see whether or not it is already mounted.

– Jos
Feb 2 at 15:53





The lsblk command will show you the atached devices. Your Windows drive will probably be there. To access the files the Windows file system will need to be mounted. Use df to see whether or not it is already mounted.

– Jos
Feb 2 at 15:53










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Use the command
"sudo update-grub"
Type your password(though it will be invisible).
You should be able to find windows OS.



Restart the system.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

    – 고경주
    Feb 2 at 18:07











  • I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

    – Learner
    Feb 3 at 4:34













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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Use the command
"sudo update-grub"
Type your password(though it will be invisible).
You should be able to find windows OS.



Restart the system.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

    – 고경주
    Feb 2 at 18:07











  • I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

    – Learner
    Feb 3 at 4:34


















0














Use the command
"sudo update-grub"
Type your password(though it will be invisible).
You should be able to find windows OS.



Restart the system.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

    – 고경주
    Feb 2 at 18:07











  • I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

    – Learner
    Feb 3 at 4:34
















0












0








0







Use the command
"sudo update-grub"
Type your password(though it will be invisible).
You should be able to find windows OS.



Restart the system.






share|improve this answer













Use the command
"sudo update-grub"
Type your password(though it will be invisible).
You should be able to find windows OS.



Restart the system.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 2 at 16:03









LearnerLearner

11




11













  • Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

    – 고경주
    Feb 2 at 18:07











  • I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

    – Learner
    Feb 3 at 4:34





















  • Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

    – 고경주
    Feb 2 at 18:07











  • I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

    – Learner
    Feb 3 at 4:34



















Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

– 고경주
Feb 2 at 18:07





Thanks for replies. I did "sudo update-grub" , reboot and typed "lablk". but my internal SSD doesn's still show up. My SSD is 512GB, Internal. Just in case, would it be related to BIOS option?

– 고경주
Feb 2 at 18:07













I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

– Learner
Feb 3 at 4:34







I think your system is booting from that external SSD, better go through bios settings and change the boot priority to your internal disk. Start the computer and press ESC, F1, F2, F8 or F10 during the initial startup screen. Depending on the BIOS manufacturer, a menu may appear.

– Learner
Feb 3 at 4:34




















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