On Thu, 16 Jun 2005 10:27:15 -0600
Bob Beck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is probably because OpenBSD != NetBSD, and
> I suspect grub is using whatever it's notion of a netbsd boot
> block is. You probably have to fix grub somehow to use a current
> OpenBSD boot block, as opposed to attempting to start a kernel
> boot as if it were NetBSD. Ask them for a --type=openbsd option
> would be a start.
>
> -Bob
I had tried the option that you told to me, but it does not works good.
The same message was displayed.
panic: /boot too old; upgrade!
Oh! I installed newest verson of OpenBSD, and how can I upgrade it.
Because I could not boot OpenBSD. So I thought if GRUBS parameter was wrong.
This is sample parameter that GRUB offered, and I used it.
-Ikesan