Greetings, My motherboard, on which I was running F9 x86_64 off one SATA drive, died. I bought a new motherboard with a new cpu of the same type (AMD) and connected the hard disk with F9 to it. Now Grub does start with these options: kernel/vmlinuz/-2.6.27-etc ro root=/dev/sda3 rhgb mem=2048M enforcing 0 but the process stops at a certain point, saying: Trying to resume from /dev/sda2 Unable to access resume device (/dev/sda2) Creating root device Mounting root filesystem Mount: error mounting /dev/root on /sysroot as ext3: no such file or directory IIRC I had these partitions: /boot /dev/sda1 swap /dev/sda2 / /dev/sda3 /home /sda5 So (also from some research I made before posting) this means that on the new board the kernel cannot find the swap anymore, but why? I mean, if it boots, as it does, it means that it has found the device corresponding to the hard drive, isn't it? How do I help grub to find the swap partition on the hd? (I need to go via grub cause I cannot run a live CD here, there's no CD/DVD reader available and no possibility to burn a live linux on usb keys :-( ) By the way, the motherboard is an ASUS M3N78-EM with the drive connected to the SATA1 connector. No other hard or optical drives are present. Connecting the hd to SATA2 or 3 doesn't change anything, moving on sata5 or 6 doesn't boot at all. TIA, M. -- Help *everybody* love Free Standards and Software: http://digifreedom.net -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines