On Tue, 08 Feb 2011 11:17:27 +0100, Geronimo wrote: > Camaleón wrote:
>> You can try to "chainload" the failed GRUB (boot from the GRUB that >> works and then call the GRUB that fails). Yes, I know you are planning >> to remove the new partition to make room for windows, but this is just >> for testing purposes :-) > > Bah - don't worry about my windows plans at all ;) They don't have any > relevance. > I'll need windows in may be two months or so - no hurry at all. Then you can also think in making room for a small "/boot" partition O:-) >> And you can't "boot" neither from SGD? > > Who drunk you coke? ;) > - Sorry, what's SGD? I'm not habitated to acronyms at all. Sorry, it's an acronym for SuperGrubDisk. Did you try to directly boot your first partition from there? I don't remember if you tried to install GRUB2 from there or also tested a direct booting. > No matter how I do it - when I install grub from an active partition 2, > than grub shows a menue at reboot and I can boot into both partitions > (depending on my selection) > When I install grub from partition 1, grub will not show a menue at > reboot. It's hard to tell what GRUB2 does not like on your cloned partition :-? Greetings, -- Camaleón -- 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/pan.2011.02.08.10.54...@gmail.com