> > What happens if you try to mount your HFS partition manually, using the > > /dev/hdaX device special node (assuming that's what is reported as > > missing)? Do you have any other partitions (/usr, /home/ etc) in the > > system? Do those mount OK? > > They all mount OK, the very root partition is one of the hdaX.
The HFS partition also mounts OK? The Unix partitions mounting OK using /dev/hdaX names means the kernel finds the devices nodes OK, either without devfs mounted (there's no /dev/ide/ in that case, and /dev/hdaX are real 'files' not symlinks) or with devfs mounted and devfsd running (which you hadn't, so that case doesn't concern us here). Either way, please check if your /dev/hdaX are symbolic links to make sure. Also check /etc/fstab to see what device names are used there. So IF the HFS partition also mounts manually, the fault is with partition image. > > Re: possible cause: it might be not so much devfs support but rather the > > 'mount devfs at boot time' option to it. For that to work, you'll need to > > have devfsd installed and running at boot time. > > > > I am not sure about this, I didn't have devfsd installed and behn's kernel > read the hda partitions allright and I am rebooting the iMac right now and... BenH's kernel was a 2.4 without devfs support, from the boot messages (that's why you see the hda device names, not the /dev/ide/.... ones). Anyway, devfsd wasn't your problem as explained above. > nope, it did not work. I'll check the /usr/src/linux/.config for any > errors... Michael -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]