Hello, Jochen Schulz wrote: > Geronimo: > > As every of my drives had an installed grub in mbr, > > Ok, I forgot that. (BTW, I find this setup really strange, but if it > worked in the past with grub2 it should of course continue to work.)
LOL - let me clarify, that this setup has not been created by intention. I tried to change root to another SSD, but I never installed grub to the other 6 drives. It happened by accident, when grub-install /dev/sda was executed, but /dev/sda is not the expected drive, but mapped by who ever to another drive, that should be /dev/sdg or so. > > What's unclear from (my post from 06:59:49 today): > >> 1.) A fresh installation from debian 6.0 netinst CD results in an > >> unbootable system, even using a single partition installation target. > > Ok, that's great! I would say that makes you eligible to file a bug > report against d-i. :) Can you diff the grub.cfg against the one > generated by 6.0? How should I do that? If stable repos are updated to 6.0.1 then installing a fresh system using 6.0 netinst CD will end up by a fresh installed 6.0.1 system. I don't have the possibility to diff agains 6.0 - the 6.0 systems I continue to have, are quite different HW and for so not comparable. So since update to 6.0.1 every installation on my desktop system results in an unusable/broken system. > Can you still make the system bootable again just by removing the extra > SATA controller? > Does it suffice to remove the disks from that > controller? Is there anything else you can do with the hardware or the > BIOS to make it bootable again? I'll check that, on my next sparetime timeslot. kind regards Gero -- 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/201103240851.04041.geronimo...@arcor.de