Hello Friends On this thread more than one of our friends have said that the UUID things are helpful when installing more than one GNU-Linux systems on the same machine. But, unfortunately, I had some experience which went exactly contrary. The day before yesterday, for some friend in our local Linux Group, GLT-Madhyamgram, I installed one OpenSuSE 10.3 on my desktop, on one partition of the second hard disk. After completing the installation, as usual, OpenSuSE wanted to install the grub on the MBR, I allowed it, and while it constructed the grub.conf, it wanted the details of the other images, I gave the location of vmlinuz and initrd and it showed them correctly in the grub.conf, I checked it by comparing with the grub.conf of the F9 installation. After completing the installation and all paraphernalia when it did reboot and I went into F9, I saw that it is giving the warning and telling me to run fsck,the usual thing when it gets something wrong with the fs, and telling me to hit Ctrl+D after I run fsck to reboot. I did run fsck, obviously without any error, all my partitions of both the harddisks in ext3, and ext3 is hardly known for getting errors. But the reboot again gave me the same dialog and this time it occurred to me that maybe everything is not matching the scheme. So, this time I made a rescue boot with a CD and installed the grub from F9, this worked before with that queer thing called Ubuntu that hardly allows any other Linux to coexist if not by brute force. But, surprisingly, I had to issue 'grub-install /dev/sda1' three times in three reboots till the grub got actually installed replacing the OpenSuSE grub (and there was no error message too: a bug or something?). And when I did a reboot into F9 with F9's grub, again the same fs problem. Now, I got the hunch about UUID-s and hashed out every line in /etc/fstab and made exact copies of the lines with the UUID's replaced by our good old '/dev/something' notation. And you know, after three reboots, the three time loser did really learn, it did a faultless boot. And then I had the doubt that maybe nothing was wrong with OpenSuSE grub, and so I did install the grub from there and with this changed fstab in F9 everything worked as it should. Though now I have F9's grub once again because SuSE's grub will not allow the penguin picture in grub splash, SuSE grub does not have splash support. So, as I came to discover, in place of helping multiple Linux OS's to get installed, UUID was actually going against it. And this changed fstab is working fine for me for more than two days. Can anyone please explain this? Let me paste the '/etc/fstab': << #UUID=8026ffff-3e71-45ca-bde7-731644580769 / ext3 defaults 1 1 /dev/sda6 / ext3 defaults 1 1 #UUID=1027b9d1-a1da-4dac-a10f-cf48bda1fcd7 /mnt/extra ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/sdb7 /mnt/extra ext3 defaults 1 2 #UUID=30d9155a-0cb1-414d-876d-73d963edeb06 /mnt/data ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/sda8 /mnt/data ext3 defaults 1 2 #UUID=4a1516f2-5021-4a53-b554-d6d7a30fbf2a /mnt/arkive ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/sda7 /mnt/arkive ext3 defaults 1 2 #UUID=8119ed9f-1368-499a-adbf-c253fc1ac669 /mnt/f7 ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/sdb6 /mnt/f7 ext3 defaults 1 2 #UUID=3f54e037-862d-4ad9-97c5-3d18cd28dd2c /mnt/f7/boot ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/sdb1 /mnt/f7/boot ext3 defaults 1 2 #UUID=488f9d37-b274-497e-a5e0-626ace580467 /boot ext3 defaults 1 2 /dev/sda1 /boot ext3 defaults 1 2 tmpfs /dev/shm tmpfs defaults 0 0 devpts /dev/pts devpts gid=5,mode=620 0 0 sysfs /sys sysfs defaults 0 0 proc /proc proc defaults 0 0 #UUID=69af36ff-2bf0-47bb-9eeb-d5619c6a4444 swap swap defaults 0 0 /dev/sda5 swap swap defaults 0 0 #UUID=598dcecd-44bf-46ce-8abd-8f385d49cb07 swap swap defaults 0 0 /dev/sdb5 swap swap defaults 0 0 >> -- das ddts.randomink.org -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list