Regards, Satish Patel
Quoting Adam Roach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Scott Castaline wrote: >> Scott Castaline wrote: >> >>> Adam Roach wrote: >>> >>>> Scott Castaline wrote: >>>> >>>>> Completed the build using Virtualbox virtual machine. On the first boot >>>>> I get the following: >>>>> >>>>> Booting 'LFS 6.3 >>>>> >>>>> root (hd0,0) >>>>> Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83 >>>>> kernel /boot/lfskernel-2.6.22.5 root=/dev/hda3 >>>>> >>>>> Error 15: File not found >>>>> >>>>> Press any key to continue... >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> menu.lst is as follows: >>>>> >>>>> title LFS 6.3 >>>>> root (hd0,0) >>>>> kernel /boot/lfskernel-2.6.22.5 root=/dev/hda3 >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> my partitions are: >>>>> >>>>> /dev/hda1 = /boot >>>>> /dev/hda2 = swap >>>>> /dev/hda3 = / >>>>> >>>>> stage 1, 1_5, 2 are installed in /boot/grub >>>>> lfskernel-2.6.22.5, System.map-2.6.22.5, & config-2.6.22.5 are installed >>>>> in /boot. >>>>> >>>>> I had this before and tried reinstalling grub and the kernel with no >>>>> luck, so I started from scratch again thinking that I missed a step, but >>>>> I'm sure that none were missed. >>>>> >>>>> >>>> If hda1 is your boot partition, make sure that change the kernel line to >>>> "kernel /lfskernel-2.6.22.5 root=/dev/hda3". /boot would refer to your >>>> boot partition after it was mounted on /boot from your hda3 partition. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>> I'm not sure what you are saying. I do have root=/dev/hda3 on the kernel >>> command. The root command points to the boot partition using grubs >>> naming/numbering of the devices, so what linux sees as /dev/hda1 grub >>> sees as hd0,0 (disk 0, part 0). >>> >> Cancel that, just figured it out. changed >> >> "kernel /boot/lfskernel2.6.22.5 root=/dev/hda3" >> to: >> "kernel /lfskernel2.6.22.5 root=/dev/hda3" >> >> and it booted, I'm in. Thanks Adam. >> > I did the same thing when I compiled my first LFS, no problem :) > -- > http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support > FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html > Unsubscribe: See the above information page > Grub support tab complete so you can find any file in root filesystem and navigate anywhere so i dont think its big problem even you can boot your kernel from grub boot prompt I have make one video on youtube for grub install might be it can help you. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SppQZEFLhow -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page