Ryzen 7: Unable to install Ubuntu (or Debian)





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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










share|improve this question

























  • 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




















1















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










share|improve this question

























  • 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
















1












1








1


1






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










share|improve this question
















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






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share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








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





















  • 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












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

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0














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.






share|improve this answer


























  • How did you figure that out?

    – Rex
    Mar 17 '17 at 17:48



















-1














Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel






share|improve this answer
























  • 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












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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














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.






share|improve this answer


























  • How did you figure that out?

    – Rex
    Mar 17 '17 at 17:48
















0














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.






share|improve this answer


























  • How did you figure that out?

    – Rex
    Mar 17 '17 at 17:48














0












0








0







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.






share|improve this answer















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.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 17 '17 at 0:03









bertieb

5,672112542




5,672112542










answered Mar 16 '17 at 23:12









ejlejl

1




1













  • 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





How did you figure that out?

– Rex
Mar 17 '17 at 17:48













-1














Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel






share|improve this answer
























  • 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
















-1














Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel






share|improve this answer
























  • 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














-1












-1








-1







Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel






share|improve this answer













Edit install boot option with acpi=off, install Ubuntu. After that you need to update your kernel







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










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



















  • 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


















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