The last two times I installed Debian, I noticed that it defaults to grub, without even giving the option to use lilo.
Just did a new net install, installed lilo, scribbled a lilo.conf, ran lilo, and got an error message: /proc/partitions does not match /dev structure I'm assuming that this means that Debian installed a devfs based system but didn't mount a devfs /dev directory (which is pretty obvious looking at ls /dev | wc). Not mounting the directory seems a bit brain dead. Installing devfs is a bit perplexing in the first place, since defs was deprecated in favor of sysfs (although maybe sysfs isn't available in the default 2.4.26 kernel?) Anyway, I take Debian's switch to grub as a sign. I know nothing about grub other than it looks considerably more complicated than lilo, and I'd like to limit the number of new things to learn at this point in my life. Are there any *real* benefits of using grub in lieu of lilo? I don't consider not having to run /sbin/lilo to install a new kernel a real benefit. Thanks, Pete -- Make everything as simple as possible, but no simpler. -- Albert Einstein GPG Instructions: http://www.dirac.org/linux/gpg GPG Fingerprint: B9F1 6CF3 47C4 7CD8 D33E 70A9 A3B9 1945 67EA 951D _______________________________________________ vox-tech mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox-tech
