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OK, I ran update-grub and it appears that no changes were made, so I
suppose that the configuration is stable.
Thanks for the help and information!
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Unable to boot Ubuntu server after update/upgrade
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/321603
You received this bug notification because you are a mem
H, everything looks good as far as I can see.
These two lines:-
# kopt=root=UUID=118bcea1-999a-4e47-a192-2cc5fb2982be ro
# groot=(hd0,0)
Are the ones that determine how grub will recreate the menu.lst when needed.
You shouldn't run into this problem again and the menu.lst should stay the
Attached is my menu.lst file. Here is what I did:
1. I installed a new disk in my computer alongside my old disk.
2. I partitioned the new disk and formatted the partitions.
3. I mounted the new disk's partitions and copied files into them.
4. I edited the fstab on the new disk's root partition so
If you can attach your entire menu.lst we can probably see what has
happened.
I'm guessing when you moved your disk from your old pc to the new one
and changed the kernel entries, you didn't update the automagic bit, or
it has gone missing some how.
I am then guessing a kernel update was installe
In my grub menu.lst file, the following line appears at the end of the
file:
### END DEBIAN AUTOMAGIC KERNELS LIST
Thus all the title, root, kernel, initrd definitions appear above this
comment. I looked at some old menu.lst files, and some of those do have
definitions between the above comment a
I believe the problem you are experiencing is that you have not updated
the Automagic Kernels List in the grub config. Every time your kernel
gets updated, it uses these settings to re-generate your list of
kernels.
If you edit the Automagic Kernels List which is Located just above the
list of ker
Of course, the last part of my comment should read, "if such special
files with disk information *exist* then these should be documented
somewhere."
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Unable to boot Ubuntu server after update/upgrade
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/321603
You received this bug notification because you are a mem
This bug seems to be similar to my own experiences, so I'm adding this
comment to it.
After having my system upgraded yesterday (2009-01-30) using the package
linux-image-2.6.22-16-generic_2.6.22-16.61_i386.deb, I found today that
it was impossible to boot my computer. Upon selecting any entry in