Hi Darac, Am 06.09.2013 um 14:45 schrieb Darac Marjal <mailingl...@darac.org.uk>:
> > If you're getting an error saying root couldn't be mounted then I'm > assuming that: > - BIOS has found GRUB > - GRUB has found the kernel > - the kernel has booted BUT > - the kernel couldn't find the rootfs, so therefore couldn't start init > > If that's the case, try adding "rootdelay=30" to your kernel command > line (the best way is to append it to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in > /etc/default/grub and re-run update-grub", but you can temporarily add > it at grub's command line editor). Spot on, works fine for me now! Entered just that on the GRUB command line to see if that would make a difference, and there it is :-) Maybe it would be a great idea if the Debian installer did this automatically when RAID and / or LVM boot partitions are being configured during installation? Many thanks! Robin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/d60c3ec4-eea7-4a8d-a365-7bbd7370a...@robin-kipp.net