Tom H wrote: > Since your shell is "grub>", your kernel command is "kernel", and your > partitions are numbered starting from 0, you are running grub1 not > grub2.
Uh oh. Have to check that. Maybe the "Super Grub Disk" runs grub1, but at installation time Ubuntu setup asked me whether I would like to use grub2 - and I agreed. Phew, but in the meantime I may have overwritten the setup-time MBR by re-installing it via the Super Grub Disk - which may have replaced it by a grub1 version. > Is your / an ext4 filesystem? AFAIK, grub1 will not recognize ext4. Yes, it's ext4. So this could be the problem ... I'm using grub1 (at least in "diagnosis" mode with the Super Grub Disk) and try to boot an ext4 filesystem ... Now this seems to be an explanation why I do not get to a result while diagnosing the boot process with the Super Grub Disk. However, I'm afraid the real problem persists - that is, without any additional tool (like the Super Grub Disk), the system would not boot but just freezes before I get any grub messages. I will try if I find out something now that you gave me an important hint (grub1 vs. grub2). Next action: try to reinstall grub2 in my MBR. > PS: What is "dfisklu"? Oops, *hem* ... sorry, should read: "fdisklu" ;) (grub command) Regards, Andi _______________________________________________ Help-grub mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-grub
