On Sat, Jun 12, 2010 at 12:18 AM, Linuxguy123 <linuxguy123@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, 2010-06-11 at 10:09 -0500, Richard Shaw wrote: >> On Fri, Jun 11, 2010 at 10:05 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan >> <pocallaghan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > On Fri, 2010-06-11 at 03:00 -0500, Mike McCarty wrote: >> >> Linuxguy123 wrote: >> >> > On Thu, 2010-06-10 at 23:50 -0430, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote: >> >> >> On Thu, 2010-06-10 at 21:22 -0600, Linuxguy123 wrote: >> >> >> >> [...] >> >> >> >> >> Have you run memcheck? >> >> > >> >> > You mean fsck ? Something runs about every 20 boots and it comes back >> >> > clean. I haven't specifically run fsck. >> >> >> >> I think he means memtest. It's a boot style program which >> >> checks for common memory problems. >> > >> > Yes, memtest and not memcheck. Apologies for the mixup. >> >> Getting in here a little late... >> >> If your HD is failing, this may be a moot point, but one thing I >> started doing was having memtest, MHDD, and System Rescue CD images in >> my /boot partition and created GRUB boot options for them. >> >> If anyone is interested on how it's done I'll post some simple instructions. > > Please do ! Here's the short version: 1. Mount the System Rescue CD (ISO or real disc). 2. Copy the following files/directores (or all of them) into a directory: /boot/sysrcd bootdisk bootprog isolinux ntpasswd sysrcd.dat 3. Modify your /boot/grub/menu.lst with the following lines: title System Rescue CD root (hd0,0) <--- This needs to be the same as your other menu entries and may not be (hd0,0) kernel /sysrcd/isolinux/rescue64 subdir=sysrcd <--- I'm running the 64bit version, adjust accordingly initrd /sysrcd/isolinux/initram.igz title MHDD root (hd0,0) <--- Same here kernel /sysrcd/isolinux/memdisk floppy initrd /sysrcd/bootdisk/mhdd.img title Memtest86 root (hd0,0) <--- same here kernel /sysrcd/bootdisk/memtestp 4. How this works: System Rescue CD is a linux based system so it works like booting any other system but the initrd looks for the file sysrcd.dat hence the "subdir" option. MHDD is a floppy based image. Memdisk is part of syslinux and lets you boot all sorts of images directly from GRUB. You use the memdisk file as the "kernel" and the image you're trying to load as the inital ram disk. Memtest86 boots directly. Hope you find this helpful. Richard -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines