Hi,
I've read the archives when others have upgraded their OS X partitions
and had their boot process munged in some way. Their described solutions
aren't working for me.
I have been dual booting Debian and 10.3.7 for a long time b/c I knew
the upgrade would somehow destroy my Debian. Well, I upgraded to 10.3.9
today and sure enough, here's the error I can't escape when I boot Debian:
VFS: Cannot open root device "hda5" or unknown-block (0,0)
Please append a correct "root=" boot option
Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on
unknown-block(0,0)
I was pleased that the menu (press L for Linux and X for OS X) still
comes up. Unfortunately the usual fixes don't change anything about that
error above. Here's what I've tried:
I put in a Debian businesscard PPC CD and held down C. I go through the
installer through the partition step and go ahead and let it format the
swap partition.
Then I press ALT-FN-F2 and go to the console.
The disk is not recognized at /dev/hda5 so I can't just do:
# mkdir /mnt
# mount /dev/hda5 /mnt
instead my disc is only at /dev/discs/host0/[someotherstuff]/lun0/part5
so I mount that big string at /mnt instead.
(This is a post-Feb 2005 Powerbook so I think it has a drive not easily
recognized by the Debian installer or something.) Then I
# mount -t proc proc /mnt/proc
# chroot /mnt
# /usr/sbin/ybin -v
Everything appears to work fine as the /dev/hda3 bootstrap partition is
blessed by the Holy Penguin...
but then on reboot I get the exact same error (see above).
Any ideas?
Brian
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