*** IMPORTANT ***

I've noticed that the workaround in comment #1 give and incorrect set of
options for using dd to write to the disk. Please DO NOT use that
command as it will try to truncate the output.

It should read:

4. Write the nops into the boot sector (replace /dev/sda if necessary
with the boot device name on *your* system):

 sudo dd if=/tmp/nop.bin of=/dev/sda conv=notrunc bs=2 count=1 seek=102

** Summary changed:

- Acer Travelmate C100 fails to boot: "Geom Error"
+ Buggy BIOS hard disk workaround missing; causes: "Geom Error"

** Description changed:

  Binary package hint: grub2
  
  Many people are reporting failure of GRUB2 to boot. Usually this is
  Karmic and more lately Lucid. In the forums there is a thread with a
  workaround being used - to install Lilo:
  
  http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1374209
  
- I had Jaunty running fine on a C100 and decided to test Lucid. I booted
- using PXE over the network from a Xubuntu Live i386 CD image, ran the
- installer, and rebooted.
+ I had Jaunty running fine on an Acer Travelmate C100 and decided to test
+ Lucid. I booted using PXE over the network from a Xubuntu Live i386 CD
+ image, ran the installer, and rebooted.
  
  As soon as BIOS hands over to GRUB2 the screen shows:
  
  GRUB
  Geom Error
  
  and that's it - nothing else.
  
  GRUB1 had worked fine with the exact same partition layout on the disk:
  
  1 ntfs 13GB Windows
  2 extended
  5 ext3 26GB Linux
  6 swap ~1GB
  
  In March 2009 I was diagnosing a problem with a USB key failing to boot
  in a similar way. The USB key used the syslinux project boot loader and
  so I wrote a diagnostic master boot record (MBR) that reports succinctly
  what the BIOS tells the boot code about which device it is booting from.
  It also allows to hold down the Shift or Ctrl keys to change its
  behaviour. The MBR code is only 435 bytes long.
  
  I installed mbr-diag.bin into the MBR of the C100. It reveals that the
  BIOS is passing some very weird values to the boot code regardless of
  what the BIOS's Startup Configuration, Boot Order settings are.
  
  Explanation of usage and output codes of mbr-diag.bin:
  
  If a shift key is held down at boot, CHS addressing mode is forced
  If Ctrl key is held down, drive number 0x80 is forced
  
  L | C                       LBA or CHS addressing mode
  D drive number   BIOS-reported drive number
  C cylinders           Geometry of drive according to BIOS
  H heads
  S sectors
  P partition             active partition number (first partition flagged 
active). '?' if no active partition
  O offset                  absolute sector offset of active partition . 
'????????' if no active partition
  M magic                 magic bytes of active partition boot sector (sector 
<offset> as read by BIOS).
-                                 '????' if no active partition. Value is reset 
to 0xDEAD before the sector is read
-                                 to avoid inheriting the MBR magic on error
+                                 '????' if no active partition. Value is reset 
to 0xDEAD before the sector is read
+                                 to avoid inheriting the MBR magic on error
  E error                   error code returned by BIOS 'read sector' interrupt 
(0x02 or 0x42, int 0x13).
-                                '??' if no active partition.
- 
+                                '??' if no active partition.
  
  It shows:
  
  C D5F C000 H01 S01 P1 O0000003F MDEAD E01
  
  So that means, CHS addressing mode, drive 95, 0 cylinders, 1 head, 1
  sector, active partition #1, offset to partition#1 63 sectors, magic
  bytes not read since BIOS reported error 1.
  
  I then tried holding the Ctrl key down to force hard disk 0x80 to be
  used:
  
  L D80 C3FE HFF S3F P1 O0000003F M0000 E0
  
  I'd have expected to see something close to this, which is an example of
  a 'good' set of BIOS boot parameters:
  
  L D80 C3D9 HFF S3F P1 O00000020 MAA55 E00
  
  However, I'd moved the Windows partition to the end of the disk to avoid
  any problems with the BIOS not being able to address beyond cylinder
  1024. The new layout is:
  
-       1      30  0x83 ext4   (250MB ext4 /boot)
-     31   124  0x82 swap (750MB swap)
-   125 3208 0x83 ext4   (26GB Linux /)
+       1      30  0x83 ext4   (250MB ext4 /boot)
+     31   124  0x82 swap (750MB swap)
+   125 3208 0x83 ext4   (26GB Linux /)
  3209 4864 0x07 ntfs    (13GB Windows)
  
  So P1 points to the Linux /boot partition which doesn't have a volume
  boot sector and *does* contain 0x0000 in the magic bytes slots.
  
  To try and confirm that forcing drive 0x80 was causing BIOS to read the
  correct device I changed the active partition to #4 (Windows) that does
  have a volume boot sector with the magic bytes 0x55AA. When the PC was
  rebooted it showed (without Ctrl pressed):
  
  C D5F C000 H01 S01 P4 O03126288 MDEAD E01
  
  Well, progress! partition #4 has been seen as the active one but reads
  still fail as the magic bytes and error show.
  
  I tried again, this time pressing Ctrl key:
  
  L D80 C3FE HFF S3F P4 O03126288 MAA55 E00
  
  Success! The magic bytes show the BIOS was able to read the volume boot
  sector from partition #4, and the initial "L" shows it was in LBA mode
  so was able to address beyond the 1024 cylinder limit.
  
  My next step will be to create a patch for the GRUB2 boot sector similar
  to the one I contributed to the syslinux project that allows the use of
  the Ctrl key pressed at boot to force disk 0x80 and LBA mode.

** Bug watch added: GNU Savannah Bug Tracker #29464
   http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?29464

** Also affects: grub via
   http://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?29464
   Importance: Unknown
       Status: Unknown

-- 
Buggy BIOS hard disk workaround missing; causes: "Geom Error"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/555500
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