Gene Heskett wrote: > Greetings; > > In attempting to come up with a grub.conf which will boot either version of > the os, I kept running into not being able to boot f8 from anything but a > fedora kernel. > > I have successfully switched the kernel.org 2.6.24-rc6 kernel such that all > hard drives are now /dev/sd*. > > But I figured that would probably need an edit of /boot/grub/device.map, but > before I did that, I thought I'd run 'grub-install --recheck /dev/sda' sda > being the new name for the ide0,0 drive, the old /dev/hda. > >>From my read of the info page, I assumed it would not write anything, but just > check what was there for errors. But it did > rewrite /dev/hda1/grub/device.map, placing fd0 above the older assignments, > and appending the new sata drive below as /dev/sdc, and replaced a now > missing FC2 install on what was /dev/hdb with the /amandatapes drive which > was formerly /dev/hdd. There is currently no drive on the middle connector > of the first ide cable. > > Confusing ain't it? > > So, thinking that I needed to re-edit my grub.conf to set the f8 drive as > 'root (hd2,0)', I did so. But now none of the f8 boot stanzas work, error 15, > file not found. > Unless you have 3 hard drives that the BIOS sees, this should still be 'root (hd1,0)'. This tells Grub to use the second BIOS drive, first partition. > So I guess I don't understand how grub works as well as I thought. The info > pages might tell me, but it seems the only way to read them is backwards as > once you've gone down a tree to read something, there seems to be only one > way to back up, using the backspace key, but you never get back to the main > menu so its easier to 'q'uit it and restart it, but that screws with ones > train of thought till not even 2 more cups of coffee makes it make sense. > Try using pinfo, and the arrow keys. > The other ugly thought is that my bios doesn't see the sata drive (sdc) at > all, and the couple of times I made it boot to f8, I had to move all the boot > files to /dev/hda1, but specify /dev/VolGroup01/LogVol00 in the kernel > argument line, but that seems to have quit working too. > The thing to keep in mind is that Grub uses the BIOS for all its drive access. So if the BIOS can not access a drive, then Grub can not access it. The Linux designation of a drive does not matter to Grub. Only the BIOS designation matters. Mikkel -- Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste good with Ketchup!
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