BTW, all my linux systems are 1-partition-each, no seperate ~s, or swaps
or boot. Keeping it simple. They are on 2 drives, one external, one
internal. Grub is on /dev/sda with config files on sda5, which is the
one that boots. Some are on primary and some on logical partitions. Sda1
and sda2 are Win-7. I have maybe 7 'nix systems, most but not all of
which are 14.04s. And this happened after I defragged the W7 and shrunk
its main partition (sda2)(what a collasol PITA - MS makes that hard
deliberately, the farstards), put in a new sda6, restored an fsarchiver
backup of sda5 to it, reset it to a new UUID, and did update-grub. When
it didn't work, I used all the native tools to purge grub* and
reinstall. dpkg kept returning errors which I couldn't fix with any dpkg
or apt-get commands, despite hours of trying. To my surprise Synaptic
had no trouble fixing that. But no matter how many times I purge and
reinstall, it is the same issue now.

One more work-around I just thought of, in light of some of the comments
above, that may be worth trying:

-After purging grub* and manually rm'ing any grub related files I can
find on the system that installed grub to sda, which I already tried, go
on and rm any grub related files I can fine on ALL partitions before
reinstalling. Maybe?

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/554307

Title:
  linux-boot-prober yields wrong uuid for kernel root parameter

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