> Are you able to boot old kernel.. you have listed 2....
>

You didn't answer this question Ankur. I am guessing you are. The
problem is that during bootup, the system tries to find the root
partition at "/dev/root" instead of "/dev/sda3". Since your other
kernel should be booting, that means /etc/fstab is correct. My only
other guess right now would be for you to check your initrd.img file
for the new kernel (see what were the steps in building it).

When does this error occur during bootup? How far into the bootup
sequence? What are the things that happen before this message?


Sharad

PS: IMHO, no reason to not use this kernel version (though it is odd
number, I'm pretty sure it is not broken enough to not boot).

-- 
l...@iitd - http://tinyurl.com/ycueutm

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