You can't uninstall LILO like that. Uninstalling LILO recreates the MBR using the backup MBR... since the partition you had the original LILO (which also had the original MBR) is gone, you can't uninstall LILO.
What you wanna do here is REinstall LILO. Make it boot directly into Windows without prompting. Create a lilo.conf file then run: lilo -C lilo.conf The LILO file you want probably should say something like: lba32 boot=/dev/hda install=/boot/boot-menu.b map=/boot/map other=/dev/hda1 label="win" or something like that... I haven't tested it so verify it before you try it. Use your other Linux systems as a reference, too. Another option is to use another bootloader to overwrite LILO. One comes with FreeBSD, one comes with Debian, and lots available all over the Internet. Here's one I've used before that I've liked (but not for your purpose -- I haven't figured out how to make it boot directly into a partition but maybe you can): http://btmgr.sourceforge.net/index.php3?body=download.html Of course, you can always boot off of a Windows CD, drop to DOS, then type `fdisk /mbr`... if you got Windows98 or WindowsME CD laying around somewhere. -Mark On Mon, 27 Oct 2003, Richard S. Crawford wrote: > On Mon, 2003-10-27 at 20:16, Ryan Castellucci wrote: > > > I'm not sure what knoppix has the root password set to, but you can run 'sudo > > bash --login' for a root prompt. > > I managed to get to root by doing "sudo su" in a terminal. Then I > tried: > > /sbin/lilo -r /mnt -u > > and got this error message: > > Warning: root at /mnt has no /dev directory > /etc/lilo.conf: No such file or directory > > > > -- > Slainte, > Richard S. Crawford > AIM: Buffalo2K / Y!: rscrawford / ICQ: 11640404 > Howard Dean for America: http://www.deanforamerica.com > http://www.mossroot.com http://www.stonegoose.com > "It is only with our heart that we can see clearly. What is essential > is invisible to the eye." --Antoine de Saint Exupery > _______________________________________________ > vox-tech mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech > -- Mark K. Kim http://www.cbreak.org/ PGP key available on the website PGP key fingerprint: 7324 BACA 53AD E504 A76E 5167 6822 94F0 F298 5DCE _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
