Hi Jim Thanks for the reply I made a type; I did get a rescue cd image for FC2, but it is for x86, and not for x86_64 ( double checked, there is no rescue image under the x96_64 tree). When I try to chroot /mnt/sysimage i get: chroot: cannot execute /bin/sh: Exec format error So it seems the x86 rescue image is no good for the x86_64 version... I will try to search for the SATA issues (yes I use SATA disk), but I would really be dumbstruck if there are still issues with SATA since they have been around since before FC1 and diskdruid seemed fairly happy with partitioning the disk. Thanks again for the advice! Regards On Fri, 2004-06-04 at 02:02, Jim Cornette wrote: > P.Agenbag wrote: > > HI > > My system fails to install completely, and seems to stop short of > > installing abootloader. > > > > I downloaded a rescue CD which is actually meant for FC1 x86 as there > > does not seem to be any x86_64 rescue images? > > > > I manage to boot into system and the rescue disk can mount my system > > under /mnt/sysimage. All seems to be there, except that it won't boot. > > > > I need help to make a boot cd/floppy / repair/install a bootloader from > > here. > > > > Thanks > > > > > > > > There is a rescue CD for FC2. I don't know much about the 64 bit > machines. Do they both use the same type of boot loader? > > If they do use the same type of boot loader. You should be able to boot > with the rescue disk. Then you would want to issue the below command. > chroot /mnt/sysimage > > This should give you the working environment of your installed system. > Once you chrooted the system, you should have the regular directory > structure and you should be able to run grub-install (wherever you > prefer to install grub at) > > You might want to type the below to see if you have a proper grub.conf file. > cat /etc/grub.conf > > If all looks alright with the grub.conf file, you should be alright with > issuing something like the below command to install the boot loader. > grub-install /dev/hda (for MBR install) or grub-install /dev/hda1 (for > installing into the first partition of the drive. > > Your problem might be related to you BIOS and what hard disk it tries to > boot from. It might try to boot from a drive that Linux didn't install > the boot loader onto. > > I'm not sure if you have SATA disks, scsi disks or IDE disks. I seem to > recall some conversations regarding X86_64 and SATA drives. Since I > don't own any 64 bit machines yet, I did not pay a lot of attention to > the details of the problem. > > After you chroot your system, it might help to run fdisk -l to see what > your drives were setup as. > > Check the archives for the fedora-test-list. There was a lot of 64 bit > conversations there in the past. > > Good luck and I hope this at least leads you to the solution. I think > boot floppies (1.4 MB) are impossible with the 2.5 kernel. > > Jim > > -- > If I can have honesty, it's easier to overlook mistakes. > -- Kirk, "Space Seed", stardate 3141.9 >