On 11/21/2015 12:57 PM, Marcelo Roccasalva wrote: > Boot from DVD/USB. Select rescue installed (on centos7 or vmlinuz > rescue on older), select configure network and mount installed, then > "chroot /mnt/sysimage" and yum install kernel... This should do... > > On Sat, Nov 21, 2015 at 2:05 PM, Siva Prasad Nath > <shivaprasadnath21@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> My boot folder has only rescue vm. How to get actual vm? >> >> >> >> Shiva Prasad Nath >> 92981134 >> >> On Sun, Nov 22, 2015 at 12:43 AM, Eero Volotinen <eero.volotinen@xxxxxx> >> wrote: >> >>> Using rescue mode or some other rescuecd.. >>> >>> Eero >>> 21.11.2015 6.41 ip. "Siva Prasad Nath" <shivaprasadnath21@xxxxxxxxx> >>> kirjoitti: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> From yesterday my server was down. >>>> It was showing only rescue menu. I copy grub.cfg to grub.cfg.old. Replace >>>> grub.cfg from another server. >>>> Now I cannot start server. How to revert back grub.cfg and how to put vm >>> not intending to sound like a jerk, but I suspect I still will. given the small bits that I've gleaned from the OPs emails, and his proclivity to .... somewhat randomly delete things, I'd suggest using a live cd distro to boot, make backups of all essential and useful data and then start anew with a reinstall. And if none of that makes sense as a set of instructions, then by all means stop and get some more help rather than plowing forward and making worse things more-worse-est. -- public gpg key id: 1362BA1A _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos