Karl Larsen wrote:
Les Mikesell wrote:
Karl Larsen wrote:
Hi Les, I just reboot to the SATA hard drive after doing two
things. First I found bootable partitions on both drives. The PARTA
had the Swap partition /dev/sda1 bootable :-) and the SATA had the
partition with Linux /dev/sda3 bootable. I erased both with fdisk and
then rebooted to the SATA using this in grub.conf:
root (hd1,2)
chainload
It booted up exactly like it did with the old grub stuff. So I will
now update my grub paper I am still working on. I will upgrade what
it takes to boot up another grub. This is without doubt the best way
to boot several Linux or windows systems with grub.
Which old grub stuff? Do you mean the chainloaded drive is still
recognized as /dev/sdf (or whatever it was when you didn't chainload
boot) if you omit the 'makeactive'?
What I mean is grub.conf is now as perfect as you can get. It boots
both hd and it works fine.
Alas with the PARTA f7 booted as it is now fdisk still finds the SATA
hd at /dev/sdf so no change here. I am ready to say grub had zero to do
with the changes in partition markers.
So that still leaves the question of why it appears as /dev/sda when you
do the chainload boot. Maybe you don't have the SATA driver included in
the initrd on the PATA boot so it isn't detected in the first pass. Are
the /etc/modprobe.conf files different for the different installs?
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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