-------------- Original message ---------------------- From: Joe Klemmer <klemmerj@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > On Thu, 3 Jul 2008, lee wrote: > > > > > I just upgraded my laptop using yum. Upgrade included a new kernel, > > > > after upgrade finished I rebooted. Now all I get is GRUB on my > > > > screen. I booted with rescue disk and can see nothing wrong with > > > > grub. New kernel is 2.6.26.9-76.fc9.i686. > > > > > > This happened to me recently. I booted from a live cd and reinstalled > > > grub. After that the system booted up. If you don't know how do it let > > > us knows to get step by step instructions. EJ > > > > Thanks for all the help. Used rescue disk and reinstalled grub. Works > > fine now. > > Heh, I wish I'd seen this earlier. The same thing happened to me > and now the box is feeling less than cooperative. Could someone please > post the step by step instructions for an oldtimer? I'd google but I'm > having to use a public box to access the 'Net at the moment. If it's not > to much trouble could you CC to joe.klemmer@xxxxxxxxx please? It's bood > to have a fallback. > > Joe > Get the live CD or the Fedora 9 Installer DVD. Make sure your computer BIOS is configured to start from the cd/dvd, this is in case it doesn't boot up from the cd/dvd. >From the CD open the terminal. From the Installer DVD select Rescue Mode. >From the CD terminal become root by doing: su - There's no password. >From the DVD no need, you fall into a terminal. 1-Let's find your boot partition fdisk -l You'll get something like this among other things. Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System /dev/sda1 * 1 25 200781 83 Linux /dev/sda2 26 4866 38885332+ 8e Linux LVM See the asterisk? That's your boot partition, sda1. So now you know. 2- Let's restart the grub boot loader type grub and press enter. You'll get this. # grub Probing devices to guess BIOS drives. This may take a long time. GNU GRUB version 0.97 (640K lower / 3072K upper memory) [ Minimal BASH-like line editing is supported. For the first word, TAB lists possible command completions. Anywhere else TAB lists the possible completions of a device/filename.] grub> 3- At the grub prompt let's select the partition with the command root (hd0,0). Zero means the first one. This is the output. grub> root (hd0,0) root (hd0,0) Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83 If your boot partition is sda2 then the command would be: root (hd0,0). For sdb1: root (hd1,0). For sdb2: root (hd1,1). Got it? 4- Once the partition is selected, reinstall grub with this command. setup (hd0) Note. If your partition was sdb1 then setup (hd1) 5- Now enter quit at the grub prompt and reboot. If you have any problems, post here the errors as well as the output of fdisk -l Hope that helps. EJ -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list