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Well, I didn't see any reason to try this. The kernel should know where |
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the root filesystem lives. |
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|
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I've tried it just now: |
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The panic is the same. The only difference is that the unknown device is |
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(hd3,3). |
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I've even tried to set "root=(hd0,2)" (I know, this is NOT what ``info |
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grub'' says) :o( |
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Just the same . |
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|
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See if we can solve this. For so far: the ~x86 system worked better ;( |
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Regards |
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Frank |
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|
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|
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On Sun, 2006-08-20 at 15:16 +0000, iccc wrote: |
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> Graham Murray wrote: |
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> > "Mirek Dvoøák" <m.dvorak.jr@×××××.com> writes: |
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> > |
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> >> what about fstab? |
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> >> Mirek |
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> > |
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> > Is fstab relevant at this point? As surely /etc/fstab cannot be read |
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> > until after the root ('/') filesystem is mounted, and this is what is |
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> > failing. |
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> > |
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> Did you try to boot without the "root=" option? |
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|
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-- |
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