Hi,
If you are getting grub console just after the reboot it does not necessarily
mean
grub.conf/menu.lst files are broken, but grub just does not point to them from
stage1 - correct me if I'm wrong.
If your grub.conf/menu.lst exists you can try this from the grub console:
grub> find /boot/grub
As Dan Farrell suggested, you must be in the grub prompt after a
(possibly unwanted) reboot, with a broken grub.conf ; the remedy is to
correct the grub.conf file, which usually lies in the /boot/grub
directory. To get out of here, you will now need a rescue disk, unless
you happen to know the part
On Mon, 12 Mar 2007 15:18:51 +0530
"P.P.Karthi keyan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hallo sir,
>
> Iam a student, doing M.Sc., Bioinformatics in a recognised
> university. I just started to learn linux. Using the pdf manuals
> present in the veb, i am learning the linux. yesterday, when i
> workin
You obviously entered the command 'grub'. Typing Ctrl-C escapes with no
damage. FYI, the grub command is there to setup the bootloader.
BenoƮt.
On Mon, 2007-03-12 at 15:18 +0530, P.P.Karthi keyan wrote:
> Hallo sir,
>
> Iam a student, doing M.Sc., Bioinformatics in a recognised university.
> I
Hello.
If you are running GRUB from within Linux Operating system, then you can
easily exit to the Bash shell.
Just write the word "quit" and hit Enter.
That should fix the problem ;)
Good luck...
//Olle
"P.P.Karthi keyan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> skrev:
Hallo sir,
Hallo sir,
Iam a student, doing M.Sc., Bioinformatics in a recognised university. I
just started to learn linux. Using the pdf manuals present in the veb, i am
learning the linux. yesterday, when i working with linux, I came to an
unsolved problem. Iam using the red hat linux 9. I hve problem wit