On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 10:28 AM, Sebastian Kuzminsky <s...@highlab.com> wrote:
> Installing the rtai linux-image did the right thing on my machine - when i
> turn the computer on, grub boots into the rtai kernel by default.
>
> What is the output of "ls /boot" on the problematic machine?

I'm not next to the machine, but I am now running your kernel after
manually doing the post-install steps
I assume you wanted to know if the kernel and initrd was there, which
obviously it is.
It is a clean install of 12.04.3 desktop 386 with all current updates
applied.  I would guess the post install steps failed on my system.
Mostly just giving feedback since I got it to work.  I don't know if
uninstalling and reinstalling would tell us anything.  I don't know if
the fact that my system was running a 3.8 kernel has anything to do
with the issue or not.  I thought 12.04.3 was going to stick with 3.2,
but there is a 3.8 kernel on there.

BTW, I was doing all the installs over ssh, so I hadn't fully
troubleshot the network driver issue.  It turns out that whatever
realtek network driver was on the system worked with your rtai kernel
and I had just screwed up changing the default kernel boot.

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