That worked, thanks!

-PT

On Mon, Jun 27, 2011 at 12:00 PM, lee <l...@yun.yagibdah.de> wrote:

> martin f krafft <madd...@debian.org> writes:
>
> > also sprach Peter Tenenbaum <peter.g.tenenb...@gmail.com>
> [2011.06.26.0227 +0200]:
> >> I suppose that is possible.  However, the workstation has 2 internal
> hard
> >> drives (both in the RAID-1 array), 1 internal DVD-ROM player, and the
> >> external USB hard drive; total of 4.  Is there something else in the
> system
> >> which can take a drive slot from the BIOS?  If not, then 4 slots should
> be
> >> enough to allow them all to initialize properly.
> >
> > It could be that the external USB drive causes the BIOS to reorder
> > the drives, which might throw off grub2 as well. See if you can
> > somehow stabilise the drive order in the BIOS.
>
> He could try to turn off "USB legacy support" in the BIOS.
>

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