On 8/3/2010 11:13 AM, Les Mikesell wrote: > On 8/3/2010 9:56 AM, Edward Diener wrote: >> >> I am at the shell prompt but in order to get grub to work, don't I need >> to mount my actual boot and root partitions for grub to know that >> (hd0,9) refers a valid boot partition when I tell grub: >> >> root (hd0,9) >> setup (hd0,9) > > No, grub doesn't need to have anything mounted. OK, thanks for the info. > The sysimage mount and > chroot is most useful to get access to your usual tools in their usual > paths and to be able to edit the grub.conf file. I've never tried to > boot from a partition that far into the disk, though. I had enough > trouble back in the days when bios only knew 1024 cylinders that I've > always put a small /boot partition as the first thing on the disk even > though you shouldn't have to now. My problem was that once I did a chroot I did not have any /dev devices. Evidently grub does use this. Once I did: mount --bind /dev /mnt/sysimage/dev before doing: chroot /mnt/sysimage when I executed 'grub' it found the (hd0,9) partition. From what you say above I did not even have to mount my system off of /mnt/sysimage and changed my root there, but just could have executed 'grub' from the command prompt and re-initialized my boot partition. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos