Okay---at this point I've rebooted my computer probably 50 times over the last three days. I'm trying to install a new IDE hard drive and have it run off of an IDE PCI controller. Everything that could go wrong has, short of data loss (so I'm fuming, not crying :)
Anyway, sparing you my long story of frustration, here's my current problem: I've got my "old" system running off of my SCSI disks. It works fine. However, I just bought a Promise ATA/133 PCI IDE card and a new IDE hard drive. I got my "new" system installed on the new drive. The problem is, my system still boots from SCSI. I have a Abit KT7 motherboard. It's bios options allow specifying of three boot devices. I have Floppy, CDROM and IDE-0 (in that order). SCSI (among others) is one of the boot options, but I *don't* have it selected (verified this many a time, trust me :). Still, the system boots from SCSI!!!! Arg, why? I have verified that the new installation works: I powered down, unplugged the SCSI cable and power cord on my SCSI drives, then booted up. The new system comes up as expected. I used fdisk to remove the bootable flag on my SCSI disk---that didn't do anything. The only other thing I could think of is using my rescue disk to do a "rescue root=/dev/hda2" but this Promise ATA/133 controller needs a patched kernel or a 2.4.19-pre3 (or newer) kernel to be supported. I don't have such a rescue disk. I tried the "mkboot" command from the "new" system; when I booted with *that* disk, it just froze when it said "Loading Linux". Maybe it's a bad floppy. My rescue floppy actually died on me in the middle of this (fortunately I have two). I have the Debian install CDs, but I can't my system to boot from a SCSI CD-ROM (but it LOVES to boot from SCSI disk). I already put my IDE CDROM back in the other computer... okay I'm starting to vent. Any help? Matt -- Matt Garman, [EMAIL PROTECTED] ``I ain't never seen no whiskey, the blues made my sloppy drunk!'' -- Sleepy John Estes, ``Leaving Trunk''