On 07/28/2010 01:50 AM, KH wrote: > Am 25.07.2010 15:57, schrieb Mick: >> On Sunday 25 July 2010 09:18:33 Dale wrote: >>> Alan McKinnon wrote: >>>> On Sunday 25 July 2010 06:57:43 KH wrote: >>>>>> You said you ran e2fsck and it was OK. What was the command? >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Normally with an e2fsck on a journalled fs, the app will replay the >>>>>> journal and make a few minor checks. This takes about 4 seconds, not >>>>>> the 40 minutes it takes to do a ful ext2 check. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> I think you might need to fsck without the journal. I know there's a >>>>>> way to do this but a cursory glance at the man page didn't reveal it. >>>>>> Maybe an ext user will chip in with the correct method >>>>> >>>>> Hi, >>>>> >>>>> I ran on the two partitions e2fsck /dev/sde3 as well as fsck.ext3 >>>>> /dev/sde3 . Yes, it only took some seconds. >>>> >>>> It's been a long time since I used ext3 so some of this might be wrong. >>>> >>>> An fsck that takes a few seconds is using the journal, which might not >>>> uncover deeper corruption. You should try disabling the journal (I >>>> couldn't find the way to do that though), but this will also work: >>>> >>>> Boot of a LiveCD, mount your root partition somewhere using type "ext2" >>>> and fsck it. This will invalidate the journal but that's OK, it gets >>>> recreated on the next proper boot. Let the fsck finish - it will take a >>>> while on a large fs. >>>> >>>> When done, reboot as normal and see if the machine boots up properly. >>> >>> And I would stand guard to make sure housekeeping doesn't come around. >>> ;-) Cutting power during all this wold not be good. >> >> KH, I think that this may not be related to a fs error as such. >> >> Yes, pulling the plug may have caused fs corruption. However, more likely >> is >> that pulling the plug did not allow you to do something that you should have >> done after you finished upgrading to grub-0.97-r9. The latest installation >> of >> grub asks you to reinstall in the MBR and point its root to wherever your >> /boot is. GRUB's fs and its drivers may have changed and therefore the old >> boot loader code is looking for files that no longer exist. >> >> So you'll probably be alright again if you boot with a fresh systemrescue >> LiveCD and run grub and then root (hd....) and setup (hd0) before you quit >> and >> reboot. >> >> If that doesn't work then you most likely have a fs problem. >> >> HTH. > > Hi, > > I installed grub by connecting the hdd to my workstation. This did not > change anything. > Also I changed /etc/fstab . Now I have 0 0 for every partition. The pc > boots fine now. I can use it but ... There is no /dev/hd* . Running > mount /boot I get the answer /dev/hda1 does not exist. Also there is no > /dev/sd* > > Any ideas?
Konstantin, please post what your kernel has for IDE support. If you have /proc/config.gz, then please post the results from "zgrep IDE /proc/config.gz" so we can get an idea of why you have no /dev/hd* devices. We will also need to know what kind of disk controller your server really has. Are they IDE or SATA controllers?