I did this a few more times and I noticed that is says that it is going to write to /dev/sdd. I also flipped the write protect on my SD card and it whines a lot about it being read only. I don't think the BIOS needs to be fixed. I think the install needs to be fixed to allow you to change the device that GRUB installs to. I would expect the first device be the one that you boot from. Something is smart enough not to try and write to the CDROM when you boot from it. My USB flash drive is only 16MB, but the install wants to partition it and boot from it. I unchecked in on the first disk screen, but it still tries to use it and complains every time I touch a partition. When I used the advanced setting and put the Hard Drive first it crashed. Can't we just list the devices on the first screen that show where GRUB is going to write to and let the user tell it what they want to boot off of? I did find out that if I disconnected the USB flash drive once I hit enter for the NFS information that things went fine and it boots fine. My concern it that I spend a bunch of time posting to different lists, but it doesn't make any difference and that nothing changes unless you file a bug report and even then I have my doubts. If you ask me FC6 when backwards on some things in the install and I would like to make it better, but I am beginning to wonder if that is possible. I was thinking that this list was for people to report issues with testing and get them fixed. So if I report a problem is it going to make a difference or are we going to blame some old piece of hardware for the problems? So can I make a difference or not? If I can let me know what I need to do. If not I will do something else where I can. Thanks for the comment on GRUB, but there are several ways to get the system back or booting from the hard drive that isn't what I am after. I want the install to work right in the first place. A lot of people don't use linux because of the huge learning curve and problems like I am talking about. Also the linux rescue doesn't work from nfs. There is some kind of reference to libncurses.so.5 that fails. > -----Original Message----- > From: fedora-test-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:fedora-test-list- > bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Michal Jaegermann > Sent: Monday, January 22, 2007 9:27 PM > To: For testers of Fedora Core development releases > Subject: Re: How to report install bug? > > On Mon, Jan 22, 2007 at 08:43:56PM -0700, Jerry Williams wrote: > > How should I report this bug to bugzilla? > > Sounds like you would have to complain about your BIOS. > > > I boot from usb flash drive and select NFS for install. > > Install runs fine and then reboot fails because I have to change the > bios > > every time to boot from usb flash drive. > > Grub allows things like > > grub> map (hd0) (hd1) > grub> map (hd1) (hd0) > > Maybe you can use that when booting from flash? > After that you can write a boot sector and it should point to > a device which will be correct after you removed your flash. > At least it seems to me that this will be the case. > > See 'info grub' for more info. Grub numbers devices in an order they > are presented by BIOS. > > Michal > > -- > fedora-test-list mailing list > fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list