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?
Eric Keller eekel...@psu.edu wrote:
One thing I didn't realize before is that the kernel
On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 08:28:39AM -0700, Sebastian Kuzminsky 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.
This was also my experience on xubuntu 12.04.
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
On 12/20/2013 11:11 AM, Eric Keller wrote:
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