Ahh! Gotcha. Will try that tomorrow!
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005, Jason Thomas wrote:
The problem is that grub is being installed in the mbr of the first drive but uses files from the second drive.
What you should do is install grub into the mbr of the second drive, and then use the windows bootloader to chainload grub.
On Mon, Feb 14, 2005 at 05:02:27PM -0600, Branden R. Williams wrote:SO Anyway.... We've got it working marvelous. Except for one thing. I installed Grub on the internal HD which only has Windows on it. If both drives are present, it works like a champ. But if I change out the second drive and put a CDRom in that bay, I get the infamous Error 21 message. Is there not a way to tell Grub to ignore a certain drive if it is not present?
If not, might that be a feasable feature request? I.e., drive Y does not exist, do not display any boot options from it. Only from drive X which is currently present and we are using its MBR to boot from.
Blue Skies,
Branden R. Williams, CISSP-ISSAP, SuperVillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.brw.net/ -- Public Key ID: 0x394F8374 Public Key Fingerprint: 32E5 88C2 D9D3 CAE8 B84A F4E2 F82B CCF6 394F 8374
_______________________________________________ Bug-grub mailing list Bug-grub@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-grub