On Saturday 10 September 2005 14:35, john bartee wrote:
> Carl,
> I will give that a go. I was not denigrating the product only letting
> the list know that the Release Candidate would not install for me --
> which is a big deal if this is getting ready for prime time. I have
> never had any issues nor had to use such a manual kludge to install any
> of the many SUSE installations I have done over the years (maybe I am
> just lucky). I apologize for any sloppy reporting and will provide more
> precise diagnosis in the future.

Hi John,

It's only a "big deal" if it fails to install on a 'typical' newcomer's 
system... you know, M$haft eating up a single drive and, maybe, a new second 
drive installed for Linux. Most people with multiple OS's and many partitions 
on their systems are presumed, I think, to know how to deal with hiccups. The 
boot loader configuration module isn't sentient :-) much less perfect... so 
when it gets confused, you've got to be prepared to intervene. That's why I 
always check it before committing any changes. And the fact that neither of 
us has to do that very often is a testament to the ingenuity of everyone at 
SUSE.

Also, I left out a couple of important points in case you are new to Grub. It 
starts counting at '0' and defaults to omitting /dev/hdb (presumed optical.) 
Example "grub speak":

/dev/hda1 = hd0,0
/dev/hda2 = hd0,1
/dev/hda3 = hd0,2
...
/dev/hdc1 = hd1,0
/dev/hdc2 = hd1,1
/dev/hdc3 = hd1,2
and so on.

So, if you see the directive "kernel (hd3,4)/boot/vmlinuz" in Grub's menu.lst 
(which resides in /boot/grub/) it is pointing to a Linux system installed 
on /dev/hde4. If you mount /dev/hde4 and don't see a /boot directory 
containing the files initrd or vmlinuz, you know that menu.lst entry is 
bogus.

hth & regards,

- Carl

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