On Wednesday 30 July 2008 17:59, whoosh wrote: > On 30-Jul-08 15:35:08 Nigel Henry wrote: > >On Wednesday 30 July 2008 17:09, whoosh wrote: > >> thanks for the info, > >> > >> > >> looking at the Fedora 9 64bit DVD: > >> > >> the first option is: > >> > >> > >> vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img > >> > >> I tried > >> > >> vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img noapic nolapic > >> > >> but that also was frozen up. > >> > >> > >> the second option is > >> > >> vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img text > >> > >> I tried instead: > >> > >> vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img text noapic nolapic > >> > >> that is also frozen up at the: > >> > >> "disc found To begin testing the media ...." screen. > >> > >> can you suggest any other boot commands to try? > > > >I'd try the acpi=off, but I didn't need any boot options, as far as I > > remember > > > I tried that just now and the test media screen now responds! > > vmlinuz initrd=initrd.img text acpi=off Ok, it's booting ok now, and hopefully will install with no problems. Bear in mind that you will probably still have to append the kernel line in /boot/grub/menu.lst, with acpi=off, as otherwise, a post-install reboot will probably result in a lockup again. Also, when you have a kernel update, you will also have to append the kernel line for the new kernel, in /boot/grub/menu.lst with acpi=off. A bit of a nuisance I know, and all part of the fun in working with Linux, but will avoid a lockup with the new kernel, and keep your mind on the ball (possibly reducing altzheimer problems, myself included). A bit OT, and don't know if you still have FC3 installed, along with MS Windows. If so, and you have FC3's Grub in the MBR, thus allowing you to boot both, and want to keep FC3, I'd install Fedora 9, and put Grub in the / partition of Fedora 9. Write down the partition number for the root partition where Grub is installed, then reboot into FC3. Yes, that's FC3 (presuming that FC3's Grub is in the MBR, and you're not using the Windows bootloader to boot FC3). su to root on the CLI, and open kwrite, gedit, or whatever, and navigate to /boot/grub/grub.conf (may be /boot/grub/menu.lst depending on the distro). Now add a chainloader entry to point to the / partition where you have Fedora 9's Grub. This is set out the same as the one which is automatically set up if you also have Windows on the machine. Only the partition reference is different, and obviously the title. I think that I'm getting a bit carried away here, as you probably are very familiar with working with Grub. Anyway, I don't get many opportunities to answer questions with good results. Usually it's only sound related stuff, so please humor me. So here goes. The printout below is what I have in Fedora 8's /boot/grub/grub.conf on the new machine with the Asus M2N-X Plus mobo. #boot=/dev/sda default=0 timeout=30 splashimage=(hd0,0)/boot/grub/splash.xpm.gz #hiddenmenu title Fedora (2.6.25.4-10.fc8) root (hd0,0) kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.25.4-10.fc8 ro root=LABEL=/1 noapic nolapic initrd /boot/initrd-2.6.25.4-10.fc8.img title Fedora (2.6.23.1-42.fc8) root (hd0,0) kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.23.1-42.fc8 ro root=LABEL=/1 noapic nolapic initrd /boot/initrd-2.6.23.1-42.fc8.img title Other rootnoverify (hd1,0) chainloader +1 title Kubuntu Breezy rootnoverify (hd0,4) chainloader +1 title Archlinux Don't Panic rootnoverify (hd0,6) chainloader +1 title Gutsy Gibbon rootnoverify (hd0,8) chainloader +1 title Debian Etch rootnoverify (hd0,10) chainloader +1 The title: "Other", is what you normally see if Grub has detected a Windows install on the machine, when you have installed Grub in the MBR. In my case, this is simply a second sata drive on the machine, that has at present 2 FAT32 partitions on it, where I can save data, and which is easily accessable by all Linux distros installed on the machine. Grub is always making this mistake, but you know if you actually have a Windows install on your machine or not. Identification of partitions by Grub is a bit different. hda, or sda (in the case of sata drives), Grub identifies as (hd0) , and that includes the brackets. So we get hda1, or sda1, and Grub says (hd0,0). hdb, sdb, are seen by Grub as (hd1). You no doubt see how this works. I'll shut up here, because I'm sure you see the way to set up chainloaders from the printout from my new machine above. Apologies for the ramble, as you no doubt know this stuff. Nigel. > > >to get Fedora 8, or 9 to boot, although as I said, I do see that I have > >appended the kernel, probably post-install. Mind you that's a different > >machine, different hardware to yours. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list