Mike Fedyk wrote:
On earlier versions of Centos, I could boot the install CD in rescue
mode, let it find and mount the installed system on the HD even when
it was just one disk of RAID1 partitions (type=FD). When booting
from the centos5 disk the attempt find the system gives a box that
says 'You don't have any Linux partitions'. At the bottom of the
screen there is something that says:
cl->raidtype=5 rd_type=1
<TAB><Alt-Tab> between elements cl->raidtype=5 rd_type=1 <F12> next
screen
But there is no way to access the bottom part. If I hit the OK button
and get a shell I can mount the partitions myself, but then when I
chroot to the mounted system there are no devices in /dev. What's the
right way to install grub on what was /dev/sdb in the original install
but is now the only disk and moved to /dev/sda? The old /dev/sda is
no longer there....
> The right way is to boot directly into grub and ask it to find the
> stage1 file on the partitions.
If grub had been there it should have found it itself - but it wasn't so
I had to boot the CD.
> Then set your root partition
I was able to do the install from the rescue mode boot, but only because
the /boot partition was all still intact and I only had to use the setup
command in grub.
> Then setup grub on the mbr of each drive.
There was only on drive at that point. It's syncing to a new mirror now.
> There are many pages google can find with explicit details.
Grub isn't so much the issue here as the difference in the rescue mode
boot. I'm used to being able to boot the CD, chroot into the existing
system and have pretty much normal access regardless of what was broken.
Now that the system /dev directory is basically empty, things don't work
when you have to mount the partitions manually. Is there a step to
set up devices so the chroot will work?
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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