On Sun, Sep 09, 2007 at 11:00:24AM -0700, Andrew Sackville-West wrote: > > One thing that might be helpful is what does the BIOS call those > drives? In your bios setup screen there will be the usual table of > harddrives and their positions on the motherboard, as the bios sees > them. Can you provide that info for us? please include how the bios is > addressing them (LBA etc).
Bios says this: Primary master: HL-DL-ST GCE-8320B [that's the cdrom] Primary slave: [Auto] Secondary master: Fujitsu MPF3102AT [this is the 10G Windows disk] Secondary slave: ST 3160212A [the 160G Debian disk] Details for each drive follow: Fujitsu: Cylinders 1024 Head 255 Sector 63 CHS Capacity 8422 Mb Maximum LBA Capacity 10248 Mb ST: Cylinders 1024 Head 255 Sector 63 CHS Capacity 8422 Mb Maximum LBA Capacity 8455 Mb Which is strange, since ST is 160G. Fujitsu data (10G), look ok. > > What motherboard is this and how old is it? It looks like you are > facing an ancient problem with BIOS that couldn't see beyond the first > 1024 cylinders. With your large / partition, I'd bet those non-working > kernels are beyond the range that the bios can see, and I'm willing to > bet that your bios is configured incorrectly to see those higher > cylinders. > So your suggestion would be to repartition the disk, leaving a small boot partition at the beginning of the 160G disk? Anyway, the motherboard is not new. lspci -v: 00:00.0 Host bridge: VIA Technologies, Inc. VT8366/A/7 [Apollo KT266/A/333] Subsystem: ASUSTeK Computer Inc. A7V266-E Mainboard Flags: bus master, medium devsel, latency 0 Memory at fc000000 (32-bit, prefetchable) [size=32M] Capabilities: [a0] AGP version 2.0 Capabilities: [c0] Power Management version 2 Probably 6 years old? (I bought it used, in 2003) Victor -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]