Joseph Jezak a écrit :
You're probably using an Apple partitioning scheme. In order to read
from Apple partitions, you'll need to have support for that in your
kernel. Turn on: CONFIG_PARTITION_ADVANCED and CONFIG_MAC_PARTITION. In
the future, to make kernel configuration more simple, you should do a
"make defconfig" before configuration. This ensures that you have sane
defaults set.
Thank you. I changed the options as you suggest. The boot process goes
now a little bit further, but it stops on an error of a new type:
Mounting /dev for udev
The "mount" command failed with error:
wrong fstype, bad option, bad superblock on udev, or too many mounted
file systems
I have noticed, while booting MacOSX, that the phase "waiting for local
disks" seems to take an abnormally long time: would the two things be
related?
I can give my password and get logged in as root, and get a first
prompt; then I could try some of the things that are suggested on the
Web, only I don't see the result of my commands, because the text in the
console does not move and the next prompt does not appear. The only
command that has an effect is Ctrl-D, for rebooting.
How can I escape from this mess?
Chers.
Charles
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