Ryzen 7: Unable to install Ubuntu (or Debian)
Ubuntu crashes on selecting an install option. When selecting recovery mode Ubuntu (17.04 at this point) displays the following error:
core perfctr but no constraints; unknown hardware!
When selecting install the last line to be displayed before Ubuntu freezes is:
AES CTR mode by8 optimization enabled
Before that it also says (with CSM disabled):
BIOS EDD facility v0.16 2004-Jun-25, 0 devices found
EDD information not available
Specs:
CPU: Ryzen 7 1800x
GPU: Radeon rx 460
Mainboard: Asus prime x370 pro
M.2 (NVMe): Samsung 960 Pro
Really stuck here..
Also when I disable CSM in Bios the 960 pro won't be recognized by it anymore
linux ubuntu debian
add a comment |
Ubuntu crashes on selecting an install option. When selecting recovery mode Ubuntu (17.04 at this point) displays the following error:
core perfctr but no constraints; unknown hardware!
When selecting install the last line to be displayed before Ubuntu freezes is:
AES CTR mode by8 optimization enabled
Before that it also says (with CSM disabled):
BIOS EDD facility v0.16 2004-Jun-25, 0 devices found
EDD information not available
Specs:
CPU: Ryzen 7 1800x
GPU: Radeon rx 460
Mainboard: Asus prime x370 pro
M.2 (NVMe): Samsung 960 Pro
Really stuck here..
Also when I disable CSM in Bios the 960 pro won't be recognized by it anymore
linux ubuntu debian
I see similar error messages. I somehow managed to run Debian NetInst and installed a barebone system on an M.2 SATA drive, but it won't boot. I wasn't able to run anything else since. I tried Linux Mint 18.1, Ubuntu 17.04, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch Linux. I am starting to believe I was shipped a broken motherboard (ASUS PRIME B350M-A). I updated the BIOS - nothing. My RAM is runing on 2400 MHz natively.
– unfa
May 14 '17 at 1:13
add a comment |
Ubuntu crashes on selecting an install option. When selecting recovery mode Ubuntu (17.04 at this point) displays the following error:
core perfctr but no constraints; unknown hardware!
When selecting install the last line to be displayed before Ubuntu freezes is:
AES CTR mode by8 optimization enabled
Before that it also says (with CSM disabled):
BIOS EDD facility v0.16 2004-Jun-25, 0 devices found
EDD information not available
Specs:
CPU: Ryzen 7 1800x
GPU: Radeon rx 460
Mainboard: Asus prime x370 pro
M.2 (NVMe): Samsung 960 Pro
Really stuck here..
Also when I disable CSM in Bios the 960 pro won't be recognized by it anymore
linux ubuntu debian
Ubuntu crashes on selecting an install option. When selecting recovery mode Ubuntu (17.04 at this point) displays the following error:
core perfctr but no constraints; unknown hardware!
When selecting install the last line to be displayed before Ubuntu freezes is:
AES CTR mode by8 optimization enabled
Before that it also says (with CSM disabled):
BIOS EDD facility v0.16 2004-Jun-25, 0 devices found
EDD information not available
Specs:
CPU: Ryzen 7 1800x
GPU: Radeon rx 460
Mainboard: Asus prime x370 pro
M.2 (NVMe): Samsung 960 Pro
Really stuck here..
Also when I disable CSM in Bios the 960 pro won't be recognized by it anymore
linux ubuntu debian
linux ubuntu debian
edited Mar 16 '17 at 16:58
Rex
asked Mar 16 '17 at 16:23
RexRex
913
913
I see similar error messages. I somehow managed to run Debian NetInst and installed a barebone system on an M.2 SATA drive, but it won't boot. I wasn't able to run anything else since. I tried Linux Mint 18.1, Ubuntu 17.04, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch Linux. I am starting to believe I was shipped a broken motherboard (ASUS PRIME B350M-A). I updated the BIOS - nothing. My RAM is runing on 2400 MHz natively.
– unfa
May 14 '17 at 1:13
add a comment |
I see similar error messages. I somehow managed to run Debian NetInst and installed a barebone system on an M.2 SATA drive, but it won't boot. I wasn't able to run anything else since. I tried Linux Mint 18.1, Ubuntu 17.04, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch Linux. I am starting to believe I was shipped a broken motherboard (ASUS PRIME B350M-A). I updated the BIOS - nothing. My RAM is runing on 2400 MHz natively.
– unfa
May 14 '17 at 1:13
I see similar error messages. I somehow managed to run Debian NetInst and installed a barebone system on an M.2 SATA drive, but it won't boot. I wasn't able to run anything else since. I tried Linux Mint 18.1, Ubuntu 17.04, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch Linux. I am starting to believe I was shipped a broken motherboard (ASUS PRIME B350M-A). I updated the BIOS - nothing. My RAM is runing on 2400 MHz natively.
– unfa
May 14 '17 at 1:13
I see similar error messages. I somehow managed to run Debian NetInst and installed a barebone system on an M.2 SATA drive, but it won't boot. I wasn't able to run anything else since. I tried Linux Mint 18.1, Ubuntu 17.04, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch Linux. I am starting to believe I was shipped a broken motherboard (ASUS PRIME B350M-A). I updated the BIOS - nothing. My RAM is runing on 2400 MHz natively.
– unfa
May 14 '17 at 1:13
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
I had the same problem, and after switching to slower RAM (3000 → 24000 MHz) everything worked fine when I installed 17.04. From what I can tell using anything before 17.04 has large problems.
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
add a comment |
Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
I had the same problem, and after switching to slower RAM (3000 → 24000 MHz) everything worked fine when I installed 17.04. From what I can tell using anything before 17.04 has large problems.
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
add a comment |
I had the same problem, and after switching to slower RAM (3000 → 24000 MHz) everything worked fine when I installed 17.04. From what I can tell using anything before 17.04 has large problems.
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
add a comment |
I had the same problem, and after switching to slower RAM (3000 → 24000 MHz) everything worked fine when I installed 17.04. From what I can tell using anything before 17.04 has large problems.
I had the same problem, and after switching to slower RAM (3000 → 24000 MHz) everything worked fine when I installed 17.04. From what I can tell using anything before 17.04 has large problems.
edited Mar 17 '17 at 0:03
bertieb
5,662112542
5,662112542
answered Mar 16 '17 at 23:12
ejlejl
1
1
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
add a comment |
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
How did you figure that out?
– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
add a comment |
Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
add a comment |
Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
add a comment |
Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel
Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel
answered Oct 25 '17 at 13:29
Mirko CajicMirko Cajic
1
1
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
add a comment |
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
Is there a reason acpi must be turned off? What I know about the acpi table, would seem to indicate, it wouldn't be related to the issue described the author
– Ramhound
Oct 25 '17 at 14:14
add a comment |
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I see similar error messages. I somehow managed to run Debian NetInst and installed a barebone system on an M.2 SATA drive, but it won't boot. I wasn't able to run anything else since. I tried Linux Mint 18.1, Ubuntu 17.04, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch Linux. I am starting to believe I was shipped a broken motherboard (ASUS PRIME B350M-A). I updated the BIOS - nothing. My RAM is runing on 2400 MHz natively.
– unfa
May 14 '17 at 1:13