help with hd problem.
Littlefield, Tyler
compgeek13 at gmail.com
Thu Jun 21 22:34:12 EDT 2007
You can also edit by hitting e, at grub prompt, and then editing grub.
But, It's already root hd(0, 0)
Thanks,
~~TheCreator~~
[My programs don't have bugs; just randomly added features]
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compgeek13 at gmail.com
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----- Original Message -----
From: "Doug Sutherland" <doug at proficio.ca>
To: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2007 9:15 PM
Subject: Re: help with hd problem.
> Cody Hurst wrote:
> you cannot mix hd installs with other machines because when you install
> linux, it is compiled and molded to that particular system and no other
> systems I have the same issue when I do it. Do a clean install on the
> machine you want to run it on.
>
> Say what? This is not true, I have done it dozens of times. I have in
> fact set up machines as build machines for others. The only thing that
> is "molded" is the kernel. As said in recent thread, what you need is
> a generic kernel, not pentium or amd specific. To be more clear, in
> the kernel config, you want 386 processor:
>
> Subarchitecture Type
> PC-compatible (CONFIG_X86_PC)
>
> Processor family
> 386 (CONFIG_M386)
>
> A 386 kernel will boot on anything. You also want generic chipset
> stuff, not anything specific to the original hardware. The easiest way
> to achieve this is to get one of the already made generic kernels,
> the ones that boot when you run an install. On slackware that is
> called bare.i, it will boot on anything! Equivalents are available on
> other distros. And repeating what I said before: if a kernel will
> not boot on any system, boot with floppy or cd, load the kernel
> from that media but use the root= parameter to boot into the
> root on the hard drive. This has never failed for me unless the
> drive is toast. You need to catch the boot: prompt and do
> something like
>
> boot: bare.i root=/dev/hda1 noinitrd ro
>
> where bare.i is the name of your generic kernel. You should
> be able to find a generic kernel for debian. Once you have
> booted from the CD or floppy, with the root= to your hard
> drive, you have a running system, build a kernel on the target
> and then update bootloader. It is definitely possible to move
> drives from one machine to another.
>
> -- Doug
>
>
>
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