On Fri, 14 Jan 2011 12:16:37 -0500 Tom H <tomh0...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > [BIG SNIP]
> >> You might want to try configuring grub and fstab to use UUID's > >> instead of /dev/mdX. That removes the possibility that the kernel > >> will change the mdX designations. > >> > >> Use blkid to find out the UUID's of your partitions. > > > > Thanks for the reply, Rob. What grub file do I change? > > grub.cfg? grub *.map? I seem to have UUIDs for both disks and > > LVM partitions, change both? > > So you have LVM over RAID, not just RAID. Hi, Tom. Well, not really, not all of the disks are LVM2. The first two disks raid1 /dev/sda & /dev/sdc are partitioned with 1 small /(root) partition, /dev/md0 -> 10 gigs. The balance of the disk is /dev/md1 under LVM2 with seven logical volumes. /home,/var,/swap etc The next two disks sdb and sdd are raid1 as /dev/md2 which I need to use as an extension of the LVM. More info, when I boot the machine, I see the "GRUB loading. WELCOME to GRUB!" info. Then it enters the rescue mode with a "grub rescue>" prompt. So the kernel is found/finding the / partition. Right? > > For grub2, you're only supposed to edit "/etc/default/grub". > > I started interpreting that as simply needing a update-grub type of fix.. I was/am wrong... So I resorted to systemrescuecd-2.0.0.. to fix up Grub.. Thanks, Jack -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110115072451.00d25...@torrid.volunteerwireless.net