On (29/01/07 09:57), Dan H. wrote: > Zach wrote: > > Do you research der physik? Maybe you installed a new kernel or before > > you did not use initrd and now it is expecting to find the initrd > > entry in your boot loader but you don't have it. Try a rescue disk and > > then mount your root filesystem with chroot. Also can try at boot > > prompt "root=/dev/hda2" for example where your root partition lives. > > Like I said, it sometimes works and sometimes fails. So there can't be > anything systematically wrong.
Sounds as though it could be a module loading problem. Look in /etc/modules and make sure any disk modules such as ide_disk ide_core etc. are in there. To check which modules are relevant, when the system is up and running try: $ cat /proc/modules look in there for all the disk related modules and put them in /etc/modules Regards Clive -- www.clivemenzies.co.uk ... ...strategies for business -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]