Robert Millan: > Ah, I see. What remains puzzling is how do other people manage to boot from > /boot on LVM (we had reports about that).
Ah, that's possibly what your request is about that I still have standing out. I don't think I've ever installed Debian using d-i, you've got much more uptime when doing it from a running system. In this case I simply started from my plain Debian install (actually Ubuntu). Add another disk, create lvm on that, copy whole system over to lvm. Boot new system with / on lvm using old /boot on plain disk. Some playing with lvm, mkinitrd and grub2 is required here. Then play with grub2's /boot device and ordering of modules until it will also boot from the new copied /boot on lvm. Trash old plain disk. Greetings, Jan. -- Jan Nieuwenhuizen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | GNU LilyPond - The music typesetter http://www.xs4all.nl/~jantien | http://www.lilypond.org _______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list Grub-devel@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel