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I recently, for fun, tried to take an old computer, format it, and install a dual OS (Windows 10 Home and Ubuntu 18.04) I successfully got both of them installed and running, but to switch between them, I have to use the device's boot selector instead of Ubuntu's convenient grub interface. It does show, but not on boot-up. See the image below for the exact boot order.

boot manager diagram
(Click image to enlarge)

No matter what I do, I can't get it to show grub on boot-up. I've tried changing the EFI within Ubuntu (it resets after restart), changing within Windows (no option), changing from BIOS (no option), reinstalling grub like 3 times (no effect) and everything else. Can someone please help me get grub to show on first startup?

Here is the output of sudo parted -l :

Model: ATA ST750LM022 HN-M7 (scsi)
Disk /dev/sda: 750GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/4096B
Partition Table: gpt
Disk Flags: 
Number  Start   End    Size    File system     Name                          Flags
 1      1049kB  524MB  523MB   ntfs            Basic data partition          hidden, diag
 2      524MB   629MB  105MB   fat32           EFI system partition          boot, esp
 3      629MB   646MB  16.8MB                  Microsoft reserved partition  msftres
 4      646MB   393GB  393GB   ntfs            Basic data partition          msftdata
 5      393GB   744GB  351GB   ext4
 6      744GB   750GB  6328MB  linux-swap(v1)

I checked, both Windows 10 and Ubuntu 18.04 are in UEFI.

karel
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