Xubuntu 8.04 (24 April 2008) CD image downloaded

My only differences from "standard" set-up:
(1) Old hardware
(2) DIY disk partitioning.

On completion of the intallation, it failed to boot, with messages like this:
VFS: cannot open root deveice "UUID=<hex stuff>" or unknown block (0,0)
Please append a correct "root=" boot option; here are the available partitions:
kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: unable to mount root fs on unknown-block (0,0)

Eventually I worked out that
- the "initrd" command is missing from /boot/grub/menu.lst
- the file /boot/initrd.img-2.6.24-16-generic is missing
  (actially, it's there, but called /boot/initrd.img-2.6.24-16-generic.bak)
After correcting this, the new system booted correctly.

Another thing that confused matters was that my internal IDE disk
that had been called /dev/hda was now called /dev/sda which I thought
meant a SCSI disk.

On further investigation, I found that the "installer" failed to create 
initrd.img
The relevant part of /var/log/installer/syslog is attached.

For the enlightenment of novices like me:
"grub" is part of the bootstrapping process, and loads the operating system 
kernel;
to do this, it needs the executable binary of the kernel itself
and also a minimal filesystem, which is what initrd.img provides
(this is a gzip-compressed cpio-image of  /bin, /conf, /etc, /init, /lib, 
/modules, /sbin, /scripts, /usr and /var)
There are tools such as update_initramfs and others to create this image,
but I could not work out how to do so unless you already have the target 
filesystem in place,
which seems to require the target kernel too;  in particular, I don't know how 
to set things
up to use chroot.

Since there is an initrd.img...bak file, somebody was presumably aware of the 
possibility
that creation of the new initrd.img might fail during the installation process. 
  There
should be a check for this, and in this case the .bak file should be installed.

As psl says, this is a critical bug, and one that could easily put people off 
using Linux for life.
Ubuntu sells itself as "Linux for human beings", which this kind of failure 
clearly is not.

However, what makes me angry about this is not the bug itself, but the 
enthusiasm that
the installation cd has for trashing my disk and pre-existing system (which was 
Ubuntu 6.10).
Even though I had backed everything up, it took me about 20 hours work from 
giving the
go-ahead to the Xubuntu 8.04 installation to recovering my old system in an 
approximately
usable state.  (cpio had very kindly changed many of the directory permissions 
to drwx------,
making much the system unusable.)

Ubuntu and other Linux distributions go to some length to provide "dual boot" 
with
Micros**t,  so why not a dual boot with the pre-existing Unix (Ubuntu) system?  
 Then, 
after a failure like this one, the user can revert to the old but working 
system.    If that's
too difficult, then at least please move the old / /usr and /var to OLD, so 
that they can be
restored using some other tool like Knoppix.

If I hadn't had a Knoppix CD for fixing things, and a laptop to look stuff up 
on the Web,
It would have had no way of recovering my computer.


** Attachment added: "part of /var/log/installer/syslog"
   
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/14096022/xubuntu-var-log-installer-syslog-mkinitrd

-- 
initrd not configured in menu.lst after upgrade from Ubuntu 7.10 to 8.04
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/222421
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