Hi,
There is no Debian package of Grub 2.04-rc1? The given method in the install file doesn't work here. Could you send me the cmd lines to do so. I would like to test it. Thanks in advance,
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Bug-grub@gnu.org
On 05.05.2011 00:00, hjubal wrote:
Hi, grub installation fails on my pc running Debian GNU/Linux amd64
wheezy/sid:
# update-grub
Generating grub.cfg ...
/usr/sbin/grub-probe: error: no such disk.
# grub-install --modules=raid mdraid lvm --no-floppy --recheck (hd0)
/usr/sbin/grub-probe:
Hi, grub installation fails on my pc running Debian GNU/Linux amd64
wheezy/sid:
# update-grub
Generating grub.cfg ...
/usr/sbin/grub-probe: error: no such disk.
# grub-install --modules=raid mdraid lvm --no-floppy --recheck (hd0)
/usr/sbin/grub-probe: error: no such disk.
Auto-detection of a
On Tuesday 24 January 2006 00:03, Tony and Robyn Lewis wrote:
Yoshinori K. Okuji wrote:
On Saturday 21 January 2006 18:21, Marco Gerards wrote:
In that case it is not exported by the BIOS. There is nothing GRUB
can do about it...
I don't agree. Clearly, his BIOS could boot up the CD
Tony Lewis [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I discovered a possible GRUB problem when booting from the Xen Live
CD. I raised a bug there:
http://bugzilla.xensource.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=464
The short version seems to be that GRUB doesn't seem to want to find
my CD-ROM drive. When I boot
On Saturday 21 January 2006 18:21, Marco Gerards wrote:
Tony Lewis [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I discovered a possible GRUB problem when booting from the Xen Live
CD. I raised a bug there:
http://bugzilla.xensource.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=464
The short version seems
running strace on grub reveals this;
stat64(/dev/loop0, {st_mode=S_IFBLK|0660, st_rdev=makedev(7, 0), ...}) = 0
open(/dev/loop01, O_RDWR|O_LARGEFILE) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or
directory)
from code inspection this call is being made in;
write_to_partition():lib/device.c
which is called from;
Hi,
I'm trying to install grub into a hard disk image, however I'm encountering a
problem.
Below are the steps I've taken to create the disk image, partition it, create
the file system, and copy the grub images into it. At the end are the grub
commands I use to attempt to install grub into the
Title: problem with grub damaging/hiding original partition.
I keep having a problem when trying to multi boot on my machine. I already have a windows XP Pro partition on the 120GB HD but when I hide the (hd0,0) and install windows 2003 to the (hd0,1) and boot to it, I can no longer get
On Monday 26 April 2004 11:17, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(B I have a system with 10 hard drive.In 1st hard drive I have loaded
(B Red Hat Linux7.0 and in 10th hard drive loaded Red Hat Linux9.0 and
(B using GRUB boot loader and when I restart my system it shows only
(B Linux7.0 , not
Yoshinori K. Okuji wrote:
On Monday 26 April 2004 11:17, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a system with 10 hard drive.In 1st hard drive I have loaded
Red Hat Linux7.0 and in 10th hard drive loaded Red Hat Linux9.0 and
using GRUB boot loader and when I restart my system it shows only
Linux7.0 ,
Dear Sir
I am using RedHat linux 9 on a 40 GB HDD. The 1st partiotion contains windows 98 and
the linux is installed in the last 6 GB space.
I am using a boot loader called XOSL (eXtended Operating System Loader) to boot Win 98
or Linux. For that I had to install GRUB on the linux
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/boot/grub# grub-install /dev/hda4
/dev/hda4 does not have any corresponding BIOS drive.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/boot/grub# grub-install /dev/hda1
/dev/hda1 does not have any corresponding BIOS drive.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/boot/grub# fdisk -l
Disk /dev/hda: 20.5 GB, 20547841536 bytes
On Friday 13 June 2003 15:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all,
I am having having problems getting grub to read files on reiserfs. (I am
using grub version 0.91 and debian stable) Sometimes, for no obvoius
reason, it would print error 15 at boot time, indicating that the
kernel file
Hello all,
I am having having problems getting grub to read files on reiserfs. (I am
using grub version 0.91 and debian stable) Sometimes, for no obvoius
reason, it would print error 15 at boot time, indicating that the
kernel file could not be found. This happened usually when some large
changes
On Friday 13 June 2003 15:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello all,
I am having having problems getting grub to read files on reiserfs. (I am
using grub version 0.91 and debian stable) Sometimes, for no obvoius
reason, it would print error 15 at boot time, indicating that the
kernel file
At Thu, 19 Dec 2002 13:52:23 +0800,
John Summerfield wrote:
I have built GRUB with serial support, plus support for the NICs I have round
the place. I've been booting a Vectra VE Pentium II 266 using an etherboot
rom on a floppy, and decided to see if I could use GRUB and so one floppy for
At Thu, 19 Dec 2002 17:55:56 +0800,
John Summerfield wrote:
If this is to help your diagnosis, I will do that. otherwise in this context
Grub has no advantage to me over just having the bootrom on floppy.
Of course, the former. GRUB has a bit more clever way to detect a PCI
NIC than Etherboot,
On Fri, 20 Dec 2002 04:04, Yoshinori K. Okuji wrote:
At Thu, 19 Dec 2002 17:55:56 +0800,
John Summerfield wrote:
If this is to help your diagnosis, I will do that. otherwise in this
context Grub has no advantage to me over just having the bootrom on
floppy.
Of course, the former. GRUB
I have built GRUB with serial support, plus support for the NICs I have round
the place. I've been booting a Vectra VE Pentium II 266 using an etherboot
rom on a floppy, and decided to see if I could use GRUB and so one floppy for
all systems rather than one for each different NIC.
I built
GRUB starts only after the BIOS initialization is finished, so if you see
something like
grub
it is already to late to enter the BIOS setup.
To enter the BIOS menu on your machine you'll have to press some key during
startup. Usually it's 'delete', but that may differ. Refer to the manual of
Hi all,
I've just installed RedHat 7.3 in a dual-boot
configuration with Win2k. I have 1 HDD (30Gb) that I have partitioned as
follows:
Partition 1: Windows 2000 (4Gb)
Partition 2: Redhat 7.3 Boot Partition
(50Mb)
Partition 3: Redhat 7.3 Root Partition
(5Gb)
Partition 3: Redhat 7.3 Swap
Hello,
I don't believe this is a bug - possibly a mis-configuration on my part. Feel free to
point me to another list.
I'm having a problem getting grub to load from my HD (see #3 below). I believe that
my grub.conf file is OK (see #2 below). In a sense my problem is academic since I
I have a problem with the grub configuration on my machine. I have
RedHat 7.2 installed on a Dell Precision 410 machine. I am trying to
set the amount of memory in the boot command. All of the stuff that I have
seen says to put mem=256M at the end of the boot command. This
will not work
Hi, Janet!
GRUB loads initrd (initial reamdisk) to the end of the memory. It uses
256M of memory. But you tell the kernel that you only have 254M of
memory. That's why the kernel cannot load initrd.
initrd is used on RedHat to support SCSI adaptors. If it cannot be
loaded, then your SCSI
Pavel Roskin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
GRUB loads initrd (initial reamdisk) to the end of the memory. It uses
256M of memory. But you tell the kernel that you only have 254M of
memory. That's why the kernel cannot load initrd.
initrd is used on RedHat to support SCSI adaptors. If it
On Fri, 2002-02-08 at 13:25, Janet Anstett wrote:
I have a problem with the grub configuration on my machine. I have
RedHat 7.2 installed on a Dell Precision 410 machine. I am trying to
set the amount of memory in the boot command. All of the stuff that I have
seen says to put mem=256M
On Fri, 2002-02-08 at 15:21, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Pavel Roskin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
GRUB loads initrd (initial reamdisk) to the end of the memory. It uses
256M of memory. But you tell the kernel that you only have 254M of
memory. That's why the kernel cannot load initrd.
Jeremy Katz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do this with the uppermem command, so instead of your entry looking
like the following:
[snip]
...so I *think* it would instead look like this:
title Red Hat Linux (2.4.7-10smp)
uppermem 259072
root (hd0,0)
kernel
On Fri, 2002-02-08 at 15:50, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Jeremy Katz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do this with the uppermem command, so instead of your entry looking
like the following:
[snip]
...so I *think* it would instead look like this:
title Red Hat Linux (2.4.7-10smp)
On Fri, Feb 08, 2002 at 04:01:51PM -0500, Jeremy Katz wrote:
We run configure with --disable-auto-linux-mem-opt (as do most distros
shipping 2.4 kernels from my looking through others' packages).
debian does too, if that helps anyone.
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Bug-grub
I am guessing this problem exists in other versions also. If I go to a
password protected menu option, I can happily press 'e' and see the
password if it is plaintext. Even worse, I can choose the password command
line and then delete it ('d') and then boot ('b') without the password
prompt
At Mon, 21 Jan 2002 17:33:28 -0500,
Aaron D. Marasco [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am guessing this problem exists in other versions also. If I go to a
password protected menu option, I can happily press 'e' and see the
password if it is plaintext. Even worse, I can choose the password command
fdisk /mbr
On Tue, Dec 11, 2001 at 01:30:31PM +, Tom Mortimer wrote:
Hi
I'm having a problem with grub, after using it successfuly with
Windows 98 and Linux (Mandrake) i decided to remove linux, so i just
deleted the linux drive partition(!) Now my machine (P2 333, 192 Mb
13 Gb HDD
Well, that was a good suggestion nevertheless! There is no problem
if we use grub 0.90.
Thanks,
--Martin
Jason Thomas wrote on Tue, 30 Oct 2001 09:12:15 +1100
--4f28nU6agdXSinmL
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Folks,
We have dual PIII boxes that are using Grub bootp for a network
boot. Root is on a ramdisk.
We recently upgraded the Linux kernel 2.2.17 to 2.4.10 and found
that the kernel can not find the ramdisk on boot up with 1GB of
ram. No problem with 512GB of ram (I pulled a DIMM).
I tried
Hello, I had GRUB but it does not work any more since i updated my BIOS,
when Loading grub... my PC reboot.
Before the BIOS update GRUB worked fine.
I have an ABIT KT7-RAID (BIOS 3R revision) and my hard drive is on first
channel of ATA100 controler (/dev/hde under Linux)
I use GRUB 0.90 on my
Hi,
I got the idea of installing GRUB after reading an article at
daemonnews.org. Grub doesn't compile on FreeBSD, so I've made a floppy
disk, so I can get into the Grub Shell.
It seems that Grub doesn't support my HighPoint 366 ATA66 controller,
meaning I can't tell the Grub shell where to
On Thu, Jan 04 2001, Winn Zorn wrote:
HI,
fdisk /mbr in windows will install its boot loader.
Goran
I recently removed Open Linux from my home PC which was a multi-boot system
(Win95/Linux). After the removal, I have the following problem:
PC begins booting, and after the "starting Win
Hi,
a while ago I gave grub its first try on my Debian GNU/Linux machine and it
worked really well except that it didn't do bios drive switching as stable
as I needed it. So I went back to lilo.
Now that I do not need the bios switching anymore I decided to go back to
grub and reinstalled, but
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