Actually, now as I think and the old neurons spark back to life, it wasn't a type, but rather a problem with oskit-mach.
Anyways, the "old" method of booting was something like: grub> root (hd1,1) grub> kernel (hd1,1)/boot/gnumach.gz -- root=hd0s1 grub> module (hd1,1)/boot/serverboot.gz grub> boot Except you can edit your grub's menu.lst to include some rather intricate lines to entirely replace serverboot.gz which is now the preferred method. You will need to research this on your own. I'd suggest writing it down on paper, and when it works, add it to menu.lst as a replacement for the serverboot.gz thing. The serverboot.gz "should" still work, but it is obsolescent. If you "zless serverboot.gz" you will see a bunch of commands similar to the newer command line boot method. So Jim, how far is the University of Waterloo from York University? Hope you can make it to the Debconf 2 this year in Toronto. I'm looking forward to it. It would be nice to have a strong Hurder presence. I'll have to shine up my Debian t-shirt... The only thing that scares me is the zip up the QEW from Buffalo to Toronto, you Canadians drive like fiends! Six lanes bumper to bumper at 120+ KPH! Eeek! My old car can barely go that fast... On Monday 15 April 2002 09:36 pm, James Morrison wrote: > --- "B. Douglas Hilton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > ... > > yet :-) > > This isn't quite right. While using oskit-mach, you must end the kernel > line with --. Drat! _______________________________________________ Help-hurd mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-hurd