My thanks go out to Ed Wilts, and Marcelino Mata on this one; Ed for this insight: > Both have the root device being /. Relabel one of them with e2label and > then update grub.conf accordingly. Right now, both will use the same > partition for /. and Marcelino for this gem: > I believe the /etc/fstab will also need to be updated to reflect the new > e2label label....or remove the labels from menu.lst and fstab. Labels > can a be pain with dual/triple boot OS installs. While booted into the still-functional 32-bit OS, I relabeled the 64-bit partitions, updated grub, updated /etc/fstab on the 64-bit partition, and rebooted. An instant Success! Thanks again fellows! Regards, Gavin McDonald ======================== EVI Logistic Enterprises email: me@xxxxxxxxxxxx phone: (604) 313-3845 > On Tue, Oct 25, 2005 at 07:24:39PM -0700, Gavin McDonald wrote: > > So now, I cant seem to configure GRUB for the second OS. I added a > second > > entry, and made what seemed to be the right changes, but booting was a > > spectacular failure. GRUB found the "right" kernel and initrd, but it > > looked like the root filesystem was being loaded off of /def/hda3 > instead of > > /dev/hdb3. How _should_ I be doing this? Do I need to sync my > /boot/grub > > folders between /dev/hda & /dev/hdb? > > -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list