Re: Gnu Grub Manual

2001-11-20 Thread Yoshinori K. Okuji
At 19 Nov 2001 09:15:05 -0600, Gordon Matzigkeit wrote: If you really don't want it online, we can take it off. If you did agree, I won't object so much, because I believe that you have more experience on free software development. However, I'm a bit discontented. I bet I have been emphasizing

ADV: Advertise your skills to hiring managers

2001-11-20 Thread SK_Tests
Would you like us to tell hiring managers at our client companies that you are one of the best in your area of expertise? Take a Skillometer online IT skills test. If you are one of the top scorers and you want to advertise your skills to interested companies, we will send your name to

FreeBSD with GRUB

2001-11-20 Thread The Ruler
Hi there, is there a way, to whether tell Grub, it should load the pxe-loader of FreeBSD, nor how to tell the BSD-Kernel via grub, the nfs and ip parameters, such as the nfsroot=x in linux. Im using FreeBSD 4.3 and ISC DHCP 3.0 as config server, and booting BSD remotely with the FBSD4

Re: Gnu Grub Manual

2001-11-20 Thread Gordon Matzigkeit
Yoshinori K. Okuji [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: So I'd like to ask you to let me (and other people here, if possible) know what you're thinking about, before you decide that you should do that actually, in particular, when that is an user-visible change. That's fair... I'll do that in the

GRUB and RAID 1--discs out of sync after install

2001-11-20 Thread Gerard W. Patterson
Hi all, After making the switch from LILO to GRUB, I have run into a snag. When I boot the system with a grub floppy, with say 'root (hd0,0)' and the appropriate kernel line, only one of the disks (the second one (hd1) appears to be running in the array yet both disks appear to be in

Re: GRUB and RAID 1--discs out of sync after install

2001-11-20 Thread Gerard W. Patterson
Sorry I forgot to mention the kernel I was using. It is the 2.4.14-xfs kernel from SGI under Debian/Sid. Something else I have discovered. The boot array '/dev/md0' is being described as '/dev/mo0' when I run the mount command. This is strange, no? What is '/dev/mo0' I have also checked the

Re: GRUB and RAID 1--discs out of sync after install

2001-11-20 Thread Gerard W. Patterson
Ok, after thinking about this I realized what was happening. The paramenter that I was specifying as the root partition in GRUB was getting passed to the kernel, overriding the /etc/fstab. So I added then parameter 'root=/dev/md0' to the kernel line in the grub shell and the system boots now.

Re: [Bug-grub] Re: GRUB and RAID 1--discs out of sync after install

2001-11-20 Thread Jason Thomas
looks like your using devfs which is why the '/' is in front of the '0', if you look /dev there should be a directory 'md' containing the device '0'. when you type mount it looks in /etc/mtab for the information so you seeing different stuff to whats in /proc.mounts you might like to check that

GRUB

2001-11-20 Thread John Rowan
I recently upgraded my Red Hat Linux to v 7.2. Not knowing what GRUB was I opted to use that loader as Red Hat saw fit to include it in this release. Having done so all is working well except I've lost my ability to access the reference partition on my Compaq Proliant 5000 R's drive array.

Re: [Bug-grub] Re: GRUB and RAID 1--discs out of sync after install

2001-11-20 Thread Gerard W. Patterson
On Wed, Nov 21, 2001 at 09:02:03AM +1100, Jason Thomas wrote: looks like your using devfs which is why the '/' is in front of the '0', if you look /dev there should be a directory 'md' containing the device '0'. Hmm, you are correct in that devfs support is compiled into the kernel. I am

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2001-11-20 Thread ALC
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