On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 15:41:56 +0100
Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Those of you that only use x86 based system don't know how lucky you are
> to have two decent bootloaders. If you took the worst aspect of LILO and
> GRUB and added some extra user-hostility for luck, you'd still have
>
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 16:37:27 +0200, Etaoin Shrdlu wrote:
> > What happens if something is wrong with your initrd and you need to
> > remove the initrd= option from the command line?
>
> Good question! In this regard, grub is certainly better since it shows
> you the complete command line, and yo
On Wednesday 21 June 2006 15:40, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> What happens if something is wrong with your initrd and you need to
> remove the initrd= option from the command line?
Good question! In this regard, grub is certainly better since it shows
you the complete command line, and you can tweak e
2006/6/21, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
What happens if something is wrong with your initrd and you need to
remove the initrd= option from the command line?
I'd try things like "initrd=" for example. Maybe it's ignored.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 15:04:04 +0200, Etaoin Shrdlu wrote:
> You pass vga=ask on the fly on the command line and this takes
> precedence over whatever is in lilo.conf.
> The same happens for the "root=", "initrd=", "ramdisk=", and other
> kernel parameters.
What happens if something is wrong with
Arturo 'Buanzo' Busleiman wrote:
> Nico Schümann wrote:
>>> 2006/6/21, Etaoin Shrdlu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Well, no flame, but it's probably easier than with grub, where you have
to explicitly press some key to modify the command line.
>>> I agree. I don't want to say anything like lilo is
On Wednesday 21 June 2006 13:58, Alexander Skwar wrote:
> Hm - can you also *modify* the boot commands? Say, the boot command
> in lilo.conf contains "vga=123" and now, for whatever reason, you
> want "vga=ask" - what to do?
You pass vga=ask on the fly on the command line and this takes precedenc
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Nico Schümann wrote:
> 2006/6/21, Etaoin Shrdlu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> Well, no flame, but it's probably easier than with grub, where you have
>> to explicitly press some key to modify the command line.
> I agree. I don't want to say anything like lil
2006/6/21, Etaoin Shrdlu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Well, no flame, but it's probably easier than with grub, where you have
to explicitly press some key to modify the command line.
I agree. I don't want to say anything like lilo is better (I
personally prefer grub because I always forget to run lilo a
Etaoin Shrdlu wrote:
> On Wednesday 21 June 2006 13:39, Alexander Skwar wrote:
>
>> True. But with lilo, you've got to modify the lilo.conf (or what's
>> it called?) and run lilo, don't you?
>>
>> Or can you modify the boot command line "on-the-fly" in the boot
>> menu?
>
> Of course: after selec
On Wednesday 21 June 2006 13:39, Alexander Skwar wrote:
> True. But with lilo, you've got to modify the lilo.conf (or what's
> it called?) and run lilo, don't you?
>
> Or can you modify the boot command line "on-the-fly" in the boot
> menu?
Of course: after selecting an entry from the lilo menu,
Daniel Iliev wrote:
>> Another way: If you use grub, you can edit the boot command line. Add
>> "init=/bin/sh" to the end of the boot command line.
>>
>> Alexander Skwar
>> --
>> Dreams are free, but there's a small charge for alterations.
>> --
>> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>>
>>
>
> The
> Another way: If you use grub, you can edit the boot command line. Add
> "init=/bin/sh" to the end of the boot command line.
>
> Alexander Skwar
> --
> Dreams are free, but there's a small charge for alterations.
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>
>
The same method applies to "lilo" to
Paul Stear wrote:
> On Wednesday 21 June 2006 11:05, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 10:47:11 +0100, Paul Stear wrote:
>
>> > 1. What is the correct procedure to recover a system in this state?
>> > What tools do I need?
>>
>> In this case, all you need to do is boot without X, or SSH
2006/6/21, Paul Stear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Wednesday 21 June 2006 11:05, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 10:47:11 +0100, Paul Stear wrote:
> > 1. What is the correct procedure to recover a system in this state?
> > What tools do I need?
>
> In this case, all you need to do is boot
On Wednesday 21 June 2006 11:05, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 10:47:11 +0100, Paul Stear wrote:
> > 1. What is the correct procedure to recover a system in this state?
> > What tools do I need?
>
> In this case, all you need to do is boot without X, or SSH in from
> another box. As a
On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 10:47:11 +0100, Paul Stear wrote:
> I am running an ~x86 system and yesterday I did an emerge world, all
> went well until the next time I booted. kdm ran but the screen just had
> a flashing loggin box. I could not even get another terminal using alt
> F1-F7. So I am faced wi
On 6/21/06, Paul Stear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,I am running an ~x86 system and yesterday I did an emerge world, all went welluntil the next time I booted. kdm ran but the screen just had a flashingloggin box. I could not even get another terminal using alt F1-F7. So I am
faced with not being
Hi,
I am running an ~x86 system and yesterday I did an emerge world, all went well
until the next time I booted. kdm ran but the screen just had a flashing
loggin box. I could not even get another terminal using alt F1-F7. So I am
faced with not being able to loggin at all. This raises a few q
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