On Friday 02 December 2005 02:06, Florian D. wrote: > I had a similar problem. In the end, I changed grub.conf and /etc/fstab. > you can fool grub via the map command, but I hadn´t figured out a way to > fool the kernel, too ;-) > > (but something strange remains: if I open a grub-shell via bash, the > order of my disks will be totally different than if I would´ve opened it > via the *boot*-grub shell) Same for me with an Asus A8N-SLI Premium. 3 disks, 2 SATA and one IDE BIOS is set to boot from the first SATA disk.
When booting the device order is like this: (hd0) SATA 1 (hd1) IDE 1 (hd2) SATA 2 On a running system the disks are ordered like this: (hd0) IDE 1 (hd1) SATA 1 (hd2) SATA 2 When I plugin a third SATA disk the order changes like this: (hd0) SATA 1 (hd1) IDE 1 (hd2) SATA 2 (hd3) SATA 3 On a running system: (hd0) IDE 1 (hd1) SATA 1 (hd2) SATA 3 (hd3) SATA 2 It's very confusing if you ask me... -- [email protected] mailing list
