Re: Experiencing the Grub Error 17

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Paul Smith wrote:
On 10/22/07, Michael Schwendt <mschwendt@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Yes, Mikkel, the disk from which I want to boot has the highest
priority in BIOS..



OK - this gets a bit tricky, because when you boot from this drive,
it is no longer hd2 - it is hd0. So Grub will be looking for its
files in the wrong place. What I would do is edit your Grub
configuration file to reflect this.

   map (hd0) (hd2)
   map (hd2) (hd0)

in the grub.conf boot entry would achieve that. However, before that
I would really suggest giving the "find /grub/grub.conf" command a
try, to see on which mountable partition it finds the file.


We are getting close to it! Mikkel is right. Inside the grub prompt, I
run, as suggested, the command 'find /grub/grub.conf' and I get
(h0,1). Then I run

configfile /grub/grub.conf

and I get the correct dialog panel to choose the kernel to boot, and
it goes though until a kernel panic emerges. My grub.conf file is now:

# more /mnt/sdc2/grub/grub.conf
default=0
timeout=5
splashimage=(hd0,1)/grub/splash.xpm.gz
hiddenmenu
title Fedora (2.6.22.9-91.fc7)
        root (hd2,1)
        kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.22.9-91.fc7 ro root=/dev/sdc2 rhgb
        initrd /initrd-2.6.22.9-91.fc7.img
title Fedora (2.6.22.7-85.fc7)
        root (hd2,1)
        kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.22.7-85.fc7 ro root=/dev/sdc2 rhgb
        initrd /initrd-2.6.22.7-85.fc7.img

where should I insert

map (hd0) (hd2)
map (hd2) (hd0)

and what should I do to avoid the kernel panic? I suspect that
something is wrong with 'root=/dev/sdc2'.

You are close. The problem may be in understanding just what root () is. Unless you have multiple boot partitions or are doing something really tricky there isn't a need for multiple root commands.

root specifies the drive and partition where /boot resides. /boot contains your kernels, ramdisks, and the various loaders (in /boot/grub) and your boot menu, (in /boot/grub/menu.lst).

the kernel command line also uses "root". They are different. kernel root refers to the root of your o/s' filesystem. It tells the kernel where / starts.

Therefore you must find and load your kernel first. To eliminate inconsistencies you may want to have only one grub root command outside of the individual stanzas. That way it becomes the single point of reference for grub.

default=0
timeout=5

# all grub commands are relative to /boot, so...
# on which drive/partition is /boot located?
root (hd0,1)
# ok, it's on hard drive 0's second partition

splashimage=/grub/splash.xpm.gz
hiddenmenu
title Fedora (2.6.22.9-91.fc7)
        kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.22.9-91.fc7 ro root=/dev/sdc2 rhgb
        initrd /initrd-2.6.22.9-91.fc7.img

The grub docs are actually pretty good. "info grub" is your friend here. Previous advice to become familiar with cli grub is also good.

hth,
Mike Wright :m)

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