I had the same problem until I learned motherboards tend to prioritize the top usb slots or specific ones for the boot process. Switching to those fixed it for me. Any such luck?
I did try that but unfortunately it didn’t work on my system. There is also an option for the systemctl reboot command that I haven’t tried yet but plan to next time I need to get into the BIOS. IIRC it’s --firmware-setup. It’s supposed to reboot you into the BIOS, but whether it works or not depends on if your hardware supports it.
I had the same problem until I learned motherboards tend to prioritize the top usb slots or specific ones for the boot process. Switching to those fixed it for me. Any such luck?
I did try that but unfortunately it didn’t work on my system. There is also an option for the systemctl reboot command that I haven’t tried yet but plan to next time I need to get into the BIOS. IIRC it’s
--firmware-setup
. It’s supposed to reboot you into the BIOS, but whether it works or not depends on if your hardware supports it.I think if your bios doesn’t recognize USB peripherals it’s not gonna be UEFI compatible.