You don't get it. I said to ask the grub people
for a correct openbsd boot option. The problem is grub
is attempting to boot OpenBSD as if it were an old netbsd
kernel. This will not work. You should ask the grub
people to fix it.  My advice? don't use grub.

        -Bob

* ikesan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-06-16 11:29]:
> On Thu, 16 Jun 2005 10:27:15 -0600
> Bob Beck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> >     This is probably because OpenBSD != NetBSD, and
> > I suspect grub is using whatever it's notion of a netbsd boot
> > block is. You probably have to fix grub somehow to use a current
> > OpenBSD boot block, as opposed to attempting to start a kernel
> > boot as if it were NetBSD. Ask them for a --type=openbsd option
> > would be a start.
> > 
> >     -Bob
> 
> I had tried the option that you told to me, but it does not works good.
> 
> The same message was displayed.
> 
>  panic: /boot too old; upgrade!
> 
> Oh! I installed newest verson of OpenBSD, and how can I upgrade it.
> Because I could not boot OpenBSD. So I thought if GRUBS parameter was wrong.
> 
> This is sample parameter that GRUB offered, and I used it.
> 
>         -Ikesan
> 

-- 
Bob Beck                                   Computing and Network Services
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                           University of Alberta
True Evil hides its real intentions in its street address.

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