Your message dated Fri, 14 Jan 2011 21:52:24 +0000
with message-id <[email protected]>
and subject line 
has caused the Debian Bug report #517364,
regarding installation-reports: System not bootable after install
to be marked as done.

This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith.

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-- 
517364: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=517364
Debian Bug Tracking System
Contact [email protected] with problems
--- Begin Message ---
Package: installation-reports
Severity: normal



-- Package-specific info:

Boot method: CD
Image version: Debian Lenny 5.0 (both AMD64 or i386)
Date: 2008-02-25

Machine: Intel D945GCLF2 (Atom330)

Partitions: 
sda :
      sda1 78GB type 0xFD (linux raid autodetect)
      sda2  1GB type 0x83 (swap)
sdb :
      sdb1 78GB type 0xFD (linux raid autodetect)
      sdb2  1GB type 0x83 (swap)



Comments/Problems:

When the root filesystem is installed on a RAID1 MD device (without a /boot 
partition), by default the installer does not mark the components devices 
(let's says sda1 and sdb1) as 
bootable in the partition table. 

Grub is then successfully installed in the MBR of sda but some really really 
stupid BIOS (tested on at least 2 different Intel motherboards) refuse to 
consider the disk as bootable 
unles at least 1 partition is marked to be bootable. In fact, no matter which 
partition is set bootable, the bios just don't try to run the MBR loader if 
there is no partition marked 
to be bootable. 

For the moment, one solution is to boot the installation CD in rescue mode just 
after install, run cfdisk in a shell and set the Boot flag on the first 
partition of the first drive 
(let's say sda1). This solves the problem. reinstalling grub in the MBR is not 
mandatory. 


It would be VERY useful to add a small warning at Grub installation time 
"Warning : The disk where your are atempting to install grub has no bootable 
partitions. In this particular 
situation, some (uncommon) systems will refuse to run the bootloader even if 
it's correctly installed. To avoid this problem, you need to toogle the boot 
flag of one partition on the 
concerned drive. Would you like to run the partition editor now ? (default 
choice=No)


------
About hardware report and install report.
Sorry but I didn't wrote this bug report on the buggy machine, so the hardware 
summary was false.



--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Hi,

Thanks for your report.
Closing as it's an installation report from a debian installer version
which isn't supported anymore.
Feel free to test and report any issues against the current debian
installer release (Squeeze RC1) which supports more hardware and also
it's improved.
Thanks!

http://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/squeeze_di_rc1/

-- 
Melhores cumprimentos/Best regards,

Miguel Figueiredo
http://www.DebianPT.org



--- End Message ---

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