Am Freitag, den 15.08.2008, 09:28 -0700 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > I would have mentioned it before, except that it didn't seem relevant, > because I don't have a floppy disk, and neither "device.map" nor > "grub.cfg" refer to it.
Aha, it doestn't seem relevant because you don't have a floppy drive and you didn't found a place why grub thinks that you have one. Ok. > "because" -- I didn't say that. You made it up. > > > > Please stop assuming things if you don't understand how GRUB works. > > If "the problem is that GRUB thinks fd0 is your bootdevice", then > actually > it seems that I understood the situation correctly. >From your bug submission: It turns out that the file "core.img" does not contain the string "normal". > >> -- why does adding an "fd0" entry to "device.map" not resolve this > >> error? > > If (fd0) is an "unknown device", then why doesn't "(fd0) /dev/fd0" make > it known? Because the file is called device.map Which means map linux devices to grub devices. > > > I assume you don't know enough C to understand the whole sourcecode. > > You assume wrong. I still assume that, because you even failed to choose the right severity of this report. The Debian documentation about this is very clear. Honourly I don't have still any motivation at all for this report. Luckly I have already forwarded this to grub-devel and somebody had an idea. So now you can proof how much your C knowledge is and your understanding of GRUB sourcecode. please add to disk/lvm.c to the mod_init function: grub_errno = GRUB_ERR_NONE; please do not forgot to do grub-install /dev/sda or whatever the disk is you boot from, else the real GRUB isn't updated but of course you know that. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]