Tobias Gasser wrote: > since about 1 year i am using the same harddisk. as the procution system > is a little outdated now, i wanted to make a 'fresh' disk. > > to boot from this disk i had to start an ubuntu livecd and install grub > from this cd. the systems (i have built both 32bit and 64bit) can boot > and run fine. > > but i can't install my own compiled grub as a boot-loader! > > > /dev/sda1 = /boot > /dev/sda2 = / (for 32bit) > /dev/sda3 = / (for 64bit) > > /dev/sda4 = extended > /dev/sda5 = SWAP > /dev/sda6 = DATA > > > booting the system with ubuntus grub works fine. running "grub install > /dev/sda" from a chroot (dev, proc, sys are mounted with --bind) says > everyting is fine but booting results in the grub console with: > > GRUB loading. > Welcome to GRUB! > > error: disk 'hd0,msdos1' not found. > Entering rescue mode... > > > 'ls' just shows a newline - an empty list! > > rebooting the live-cd, reinstalling grub, putting my grub.conf into > place - the system boots fine. > > i built grub as in the book. > > "grub-install /dev/sda" has no errors: > Installatoin finished. no error reported > > grub from ubuntu can boot either partitions (32 or 64bit), so does grub > from parted magic. > > i tried both grub versions i built (32/64) but none can boot, both just > enter the console as mentionned above. > > grub.conf is very basic and works fine with grub from ubuntu and parted > magic. > > ** cut > set root='(hd0,1)' > set timeout=10 > insmod ext2 > menuentry "linux 32bit" { > linux /boot/kernel-3.4.18-t32 root=/dev/sda2 > } > menuentry "linux 64bit" { > linux /boot/kernel-3.4.18-t64 root=/dev/sda3 > }
If /boot is a separate partition, then the linux lines should look like: linux /kernel-3.4.18-t64 root=/dev/sda3 ro note the you don't specify /boot there. From the viewpoint of grub, there is no /boot directory. I suspect that you installed grub from ubuntu without /boot mounted as a separate partition. One thing to do is to drop to the grub command line and do: grub> ls (hd0,1) For the ubuntu instances, try: linux (hd0,2)/boot/kernel-3.4.18-t32 root=/dev/sda2 linux (hd0,3)/boot/kernel-3.4.18-t64 root=/dev/sda3 The trick is to know which version of the grub configuration file is being used. A simple 'grub install /dev/sda' will assume that it is using /boot/grub/grub.cfg from where /boot is located when the install is run. Check this and let us know if you need more help. -- Bruce -- http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support FAQ: http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html Unsubscribe: See the above information page