On Thu, 29 Jul 2010, Brian McCullough wrote: > I guess I didn't understand the implications of switching to Grub 2, because > I let Ubuntu 10.04 do so when I was trying to dual boot a Grub 1 machine that > I had. Once it was finished, I could not find the old system at all, and the > menu.lst ( or grub.conf or whatever ) in /boot/grub seems to have no effect > on anything. At least changes that I make seem to do nothing. > > Certainly I can mount the LVs that comprised the old system, so I know that > the install did not overwrite the LVs that I did not tell it to use, but I > can not seem to boot the old system. Ubuntu installed a new grub, with config files in a new location, probably in the Ubuntu root filesystem. Those are the only config files (that instance of) grub will use. I've not used grub 2 yet. Unlikely, but perhaps they renamed the config? Check man pages. Possible approaches: 1) You could mount that Ubuntu filesystem in other oses to modify its menu.lst. 2) You could add a Chain entry to the Ubuntu grub to load the old grub1 in /boot/grub. This will require reinstalling grub1 to the partition boot sector instead of the master boot sector. 3) Reinstall grub2 to a partition boot sector, reinstall grub1 to the master boot sector, and add a chain entry to grub1 to boot grub2. 4) Reinstall grub2 to reside in the /boot/grub filesystem, overwriting grub1. Mount that filesystem in Ubuntu and create symlinks as necessary so that Ubuntu updates work properly. In all cases, before playing with all that, go burn yourself a copy of Super Grub on CD. Very handy when your system is unbootable... Distro LiveCDs are also handy, but Super Grub is much faster when you just want to boot grub. -- Stuart D. Gathman <stuart@bmsi.com> Business Management Systems Inc. Phone: 703 591-0911 Fax: 703 591-6154 "Confutatis maledictis, flammis acribus addictis" - background song for a Microsoft sponsored "Where do you want to go from here?" commercial. _______________________________________________ linux-lvm mailing list linux-lvm@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/