On Sat, 27 Dec 2008 17:57:46 -0600, Seann Clark wrote: > Antonio Olivares wrote: >>>> Welcome to the GRUB_ Club :) >>>> That is when you install a new kernel, machine reboots and you are greeted with a GRUB__ prompt only that does nothing :( >>>> What you need to do(to make your computer function) is to boot in rescue mode and reinstall grub. That way you get rid of your GRUB_ problem. This GRUB_ problem has bitten many of us that it is not funny anymore. >>>> But it happens(we can't complain, it happens to anyone of us, no one is exempt), the good thing is that there's a workaround. Try that and report back. >>> Hmmm ... What means "reinstall" here? How do you do it?? [....] >>> >>> Is there such a command as "reinstall grub," or do you do it by >>> commanding "grub" from root and doing God knows what from there, or >>> ...? >> It should be something like # grub-install /dev/sdX where X is a, b, c, ...? else try with grub? and press TAB to see options. > Ok, Grub can be awesome, and it can be the suck. The best way, that > doesn't take a giant amount of effort, is to read the site first, > download and burn the iso, and run as you read it. > > http://www.supergrubdisk.org/index.php > > > This has helped me with a lot of Grub related issues, including ones > that the IRC room didn't seem to have a handle on (Where the F7 Rescue > ISO didn't see the LVM and grub set up, F8 saw it, but would toast the > F7 system) and using that I fixed the Grub issues I got (It wasn't as > pretty as Grub_ it was no o/s found at all issues, but same ballpark, > with stage 1 grub loading from what I have read on this). Night thought : if yum works in rescue mode (where I always tell anaconda yes to firing up eth0 and connecting) could I just do "yum remove grub" followed by "yum install grub"? Or better, some cross- combination of the latter with Antonio's "something like # grub-install / dev/sdX"?? Or is all that kind of thing (ringing in yum at all, maybe) for some arcane reason? Or could I tell anaconda to "upgrade" the F10 drive to itself? That has often worked for me on single-drive machines. You can see that I'm looking for some way to fight shy of tackling grub itself; every time I touch it, even just so much as to edit grub.conf, I go cross-eyed for a week. Also, I'm thinking it's time I found some way to back up all of XP to some DVD, or double-DVD, or an external hard drive. (I have one; and yes, I should've done it in the first place ...) If there's a way to get F10 to do it, instead of XP itself, I'd be glad of that ... -- Beartooth Staffwright, PhD, Neo-Redneck Linux Convert Remember I know precious little of what I am talking about. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines