On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 2:14 PM, Dan McGhee wrote:
> BTW. If writing about UEFI and booting in a hint, would you care to
> author it with me?
Maybe. Depends on how much time I have. If I'm gonna commit myself to
adding a LFS installation to my machine. Virtualbox EFI emulation
isn't that stellar.
On 12/19/2013 01:53 PM, William Immendorf wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 1:32 PM, Dan McGhee wrote:
>> I purposefully didn't mention gummiboot because I wanted my presentation
>> to be as "minimal" as possible. The same reason for "no logic" and
>> references. I really like gummiboot. And yes, i
On Thu, Dec 19, 2013 at 1:32 PM, Dan McGhee wrote:
> I purposefully didn't mention gummiboot because I wanted my presentation
> to be as "minimal" as possible. The same reason for "no logic" and
> references. I really like gummiboot. And yes, it it PCIutils that it needs.
Yea, I really like what I
On 12/19/2013 01:22 PM, William Immendorf wrote:
> Thanks for posting advice for EFI users. You should probally make this
> into a hint sometime soon. I might want to add info about Gummiboot
> [1] (or at least mention it) - it's really useful if you want to take
> advantage of EFI and still be abl
Thanks for posting advice for EFI users. You should probally make this
into a hint sometime soon. I might want to add info about Gummiboot
[1] (or at least mention it) - it's really useful if you want to take
advantage of EFI and still be able to choose almost instantly which OS
you want to boot in
Booting LFS can now involve a series of decisions on how you want to
boot. If you don't have UEFI firmware it's easy. Follow the GRUB2
instructions in Ch. 8.4. If you have UEFI firmware, the situation can
get a little "stickier." Now the decision is to boot using GRUB2 in the
"BIOS Mode" or
On Sat, 2012-12-22 at 00:31 +, Richard Melville wrote:
> It seems a little churlish to pick holes in what is essentially a good
> article, and, indeed, one that supplied the answer to a question on
> this list.
True. Well, suffice it to say that the /dev/disks symlink tree *does*
support GPT
> On Thu, 2012-12-20 at 14:53 +, Richard Melville wrote:
>
> > I think that was understood; when they said that it was "stupid" it
> > was surely meant that there could be some confusion in the use of
> > similar terms.
>
> Possibly, though if they'd understood it, you'd think they'd have
On Tue, 2012-12-18 at 11:19 +, Richard Melville wrote
>
> Would't using GPT instead of MBR be a viable alternative?
Nope. GPT assigns UUIDs to the partitions, but that's all - the kernel
still deals only with traditional device names (sda1, sda2, etc). The
initramfs is still needed t
On 18/12/12 01:24, Alexander Spitzer wrote:
Hello all,
I am having a hard time booting my LFS system, which is on a USB
drive. I installed grub on /dev/sdc (the usb relative to the host) and
the bios successfully finds GRUB. After around 2.3 seconds, the boot
process hangs after printing what
Richard Melville wrote:
>>
>>> Now it would be nice for it to work using UUIDs so the booting can
>>> be independent of host system.
>>
>> You need to use an initrd of that. See BLFS.
> Would't using GPT instead of MBR be a viable alternative?
No. Mounting the root partition is a kernel issue a
>
> > Now it would be nice for it to work using UUIDs so the booting can
> > be independent of host system.
>
> You need to use an initrd of that. See BLFS.
>
>-- Bruce
>
>
Would't using GPT instead of MBR be a viable alternative?
Richard
--
http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-s
Alexander Spitzer wrote:
> I got it to work! Turns out that the root file system changes to /dev/sdc1
> after all the harddisks are found so changing the line root=/dev/sda1 to
> root=/dev/sdc1 and adding a rootdelay successfully booted the system!
>
> Now it would be nice for it to work using UUID
I got it to work! Turns out that the root file system changes to /dev/sdc1
after all the harddisks are found so changing the line root=/dev/sda1 to
root=/dev/sdc1 and adding a rootdelay successfully booted the system!
Now it would be nice for it to work using UUIDs so the booting can
be independen
Hello all,
I am having a hard time booting my LFS system, which is on a USB drive. I
installed grub on /dev/sdc (the usb relative to the host) and the bios
successfully finds GRUB. After around 2.3 seconds, the boot process hangs
after printing what I believe to be a trace call. Interestingly, one
Garrett Gaston wrote:
>
> I know it's unusual for it to be hda rather than sda but it is hda.
> It's very strange, the first time I did LFS on the same computer it
> was sda until it came to the boot grub.cfg file, then it wouldn't
> boot unless I referenced it as hda even though the entire rest of
I know it's unusual for it to be hda rather than sda but it is hda. It's very
strange, the first time I did LFS on the same computer it was sda until it came
to the boot grub.cfg file, then it wouldn't boot unless I referenced it as hda
even though the entire rest of the project sda sufficed. N
Garrett Gaston wrote:
>
> hda1. I set the first part to hd0,1 and further down o the configuration file
> I set it to hda1 as well.
Don't top post.
It's unlikely that your drive is hda. It's most likely sda.
What is your hardware? It is also quite unusual for LFS to be on the
first partition
hda1. I set the first part to hd0,1 and further down o the configuration file I
set it to hda1 as well.
> Date: Mon, 15 Oct 2012 17:19:10 -0500
> From: bruce.du...@gmail.com
> To: lfs-support@linuxfromscratch.org
> Subject: Re: [lfs-support] Booting LFS
>
> Garrett Gaston wro
Garrett Gaston wrote:
>
> I just completed the LFS project but I'M having trouble loading up.
> autorun DONE
> [ 1.9945e0] CFS: Cannot open root device "hda1" or unknown-block(0,0):
> error -6
> [ 1.994633] Pleaes append a correct "root=" boot option; here are the
> available partitions:
On Oct 15, 2012, at 5:14 PM, Garrett Gaston wrote:
I just completed the LFS project but I'M having trouble loading up.
autorun DONE
[ 1.9945e0] CFS: Cannot open root device "hda1" or unknown-
block(0,0): error -6
http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/faq.html#unable-to-mount-root
Since
I just completed the LFS project but I'M having trouble loading up.
autorun DONE
[ 1.9945e0] CFS: Cannot open root device "hda1" or unknown-block(0,0):
error -6
[ 1.994633] Pleaes append a correct "root=" boot option; here are the
available partitions:
[1.994732] Kernel panic - not synci
On Sep 2, 2012, at 16:41 PM, Garrett Gaston wrote:
> 2.033750] VFS : Unable to mount root fs via NFS, trying floppy
>
> 2.034037] VFS : Cannot open root device "sda2" or unknown-black(2,0)
>
> 2.034109] Please append a correct "root=" boot option ; here are
> the available partitions:
>
>
Garrett Gaston wrote:
>
> sda1 is the LFS system
>
> sda2 is the swap partition
>
> sda3 is the host Debian system
>
> Debian grub.cfg
>
> http://pastebin.com/s7avRXM1
>
>
> LFS grub.cfg
>
> http://pastebin.com/Pmw1KQVG
OK. The line:
linux /boot/vmlinuz-3.2.6-lfs-7.1 root=/dev/sda2 ro
shou
Garrett Gaston wrote:
>
> I haven't yet fixed Debian's boot process but I tried to fix the LFS
> boot loader, I edited files via ssh as usual, I just had to download and
> burn a boot cd to get it up and running. I got a little progress in
> that now LFS is trying to start but I'M getting a coupl
sda1 is the LFS system
sda2 is the swap partition
sda3 is the host Debian system
Debian grub.cfg
http://pastebin.com/s7avRXM1
LFS grub.cfg
http://pastebin.com/Pmw1KQVG
--
http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman/listinfo/lfs-support
FAQ: http://www.linu
I haven't yet fixed Debian's boot process but I tried to fix the LFS
boot loader, I edited files via ssh as usual, I just had to download and
burn a boot cd to get it up and running. I got a little progress in
that now LFS is trying to start but I'M getting a couple of errors.
2.033750] VFS
Garrett Gaston wrote:
>
> I finished LFS but it will not boot. When powering on the computer I
> get a boot screen showing one option, "GNU/Linux, Linux
> 3.2.6-lfs-7.1". When selected with ENTER I get "Press any key to
> continue", then it goes back to the same boot screen with the same
> opt
I finished LFS but it will not boot. When powering on the computer I get a boot
screen showing one option, "GNU/Linux, Linux 3.2.6-lfs-7.1". When selected
with ENTER I get "Press any key to continue", then it goes back to the same
boot screen with the same option. Any ideas.
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