-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- On Sunday, 30. September 2001 17:34, Bob Berman wrote: > I am sure that this is the problem. But I have another Linux > install on the same machine and that boots fine, although > it is SuSe 7.0 vs. this one is SuSe 7.2. This was an > initial install from CD and I had never booted it before. > Now I have to figure out some way to boot it.
As someone else has already written, you probably do not boot the initial ram disk. The initial ram disk is an additional file system, which is used as a temporary root filesystem prior to mounting the real root filesystem. This ram disk somtimes does contain drivers needed to mount the root filesystem. Allthough this IMHO is broken by design and a popular source of trouble, linux included it to allow distributions without custom kernels. GRUB does have an option to load the initial ramdisk, but I cannot tell you about it, because I do not use it. I suppose, the GRUB documentation will contain some hints about the initial RAM disk. I would just boot your first linux system and build a kerlen which includes the drivers needed. This kernel can be put on a floppy disk or bootet via grub or lilo. 73, Mario - -- Mario Klebsch [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP-Key available at http://www.klebsch.de/public.key Fingerprint DSS: EE7C DBCC D9C8 5DC1 D4DB 1483 30CE 9FB2 A047 9CE0 Diffie-Hellman: D447 4ED6 8A10 2C65 C5E5 8B98 9464 53FF 9382 F518 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGPfreeware 5.0i for non-commercial use MessageID: BT4aZu0P17/nyO0S7jrVV1TPoUL76rPk iQA/AwUBO7dowTDOn7KgR5zgEQK/dwCg0w0Cgarm1vJ9xpwdUbbtZ6V2EqYAoIPb CnUZeT44bf8r2yS8O07M/rTk =/ZS5 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Bug-grub mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/bug-grub
