I had written: "How do you get the workaround above to work when the
host won't boot?"

Duh! I just had to scroll down to the generics that were just off
screen,  so now I can install the workaround.

Selecting the package "linux-virtual" fortunately does not de-install
linux-generic,  but it does cause the host system's grub config to be
updated to boot linux-virtual by default.

Was the current  linux-virtual  released without  first trying to boot a
host system?  If someone had tried a simple "reboot" after installing
linux-virtual, they would have noticed that the host could no longer
boot!  Unless they had manually installed the "workaround" as well,
simply "knowing" that it was needed rather than relying on the
dependency mwechanism.

Someone will probably respond that you are not supposed to install
linux-virtual on a host machine.  And it's probably even documented
somewhere.  But if that's the case,  shouldn't there be some check
performed to prevent (or at least warn about) it's installation on  a
host machine?

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/570542

Title:
  linux-image-virtual does not include ahci module, prevents virtualbox
  from booting an Ubuntu guest

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