Chris Jones wrote:
Yes, GRUB.
You have yet to prove there is anything wrong with grub.
grub requires your bios to be able to read what it has been told to read
from /boot - If the bios is unable to read /boot that it will seem like grub
is failing. When in fact it is a combination of the bios and where /boot has
been put that is the problem.
You failed to present any evidence that it is truly grub that is at fault, and
not your bios/'your placement of /boot' that is at fault...
Chris
But you do not explain it right. Grub did what you asked it to do
exactly. And this done it still doesn't work. This is because the BIOS
has to read grub. And if BIOS can't find grub it fails. You are not
booted up.
--
Karl F. Larsen, AKA K5DI
Linux User
#450462 http://counter.li.org.
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