Package: grub-common Version: 1.99-22.1 Severity: normal Hello,
I just installed debian testing on a computer with 2 hard drives. I installed in a btrfs partition on one drive, then added a partition from the second drive to make it a raid1. I additionally marked that extra partition as "boot" and used dpkg-reconfigure to ask grub to install on both drives. Now if I remove the first drive (after all, the point of raid1 is that this drive may die), the computer won't boot (some message about an invalid filesystem). I think there is some magic in place so grub does the right thing with md arrays (lets each partition believe it is the first one), could it be that it needs extending to the btrfs case? -- System Information: Debian Release: wheezy/sid APT prefers testing APT policy: (500, 'testing'), (300, 'stable'), (50, 'unstable'), (1, 'experimental') Architecture: amd64 (x86_64) Foreign Architectures: i386 Kernel: Linux 3.4-trunk-amd64 (SMP w/8 CPU cores) Locale: LANG=en_US.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8) Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/dash Versions of packages grub-common depends on: ii gettext-base 0.18.1.1-9 ii libc6 2.13-35 ii libdevmapper1.02.1 2:1.02.74-4 ii libfreetype6 2.4.9-1 ii libfuse2 2.9.0-2 ii zlib1g 1:1.2.7.dfsg-13 Versions of packages grub-common recommends: ii os-prober 1.54 Versions of packages grub-common suggests: ii desktop-base 7.0.2 pn grub-emu <none> pn multiboot-doc <none> pn xorriso <none> -- no debconf information -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

