Quoting Brian <a...@cityscape.co.uk>:
On Sat 14 Feb 2015 at 15:54:26 +0000, Chris Fisichella wrote:
Quoting Pascal Hambourg <pas...@plouf.fr.eu.org>:
Does grub start a rescue shell ? If yes, what is the output of "ls" and
what does "set" display about prefix= and root= variables ?
grub rescue>
grub rescue> ls
returns a single blank line.
Which dowsn't look very healthy. GRUB doesn't see any disks.
help-g...@gnu.org is recommending:
[Snip some quoted text]
May Debian has some specific instructions how to recover bootloader in
which case you better ask them. Also above will make grub2 primary
bootloader; if you dual-boot you may want to install grub on partition."
I'd use a Debian netinst image in rescue mode and reinstall GRUB to the
We're thinking along the same lines. I tried the DVD rescue mode to
reinstall GRUB. I did not think to use the netinst image. I don't know
what difference that would make, however. Anyway, it did not help.
I found the grub-install program the help-grub mailing list suggested.
They also suggested to stay close to the distribution, so I'll let you
all know what I did if I get this install to work.
I'm going to boot with the first DVD and go to rescue mode. I have
successfully mounted the disk. I can see all the files. I just don't
know why Grub can't see them. The install disk can see them, too,
obviously, because it installed the files. I think this is a grub
config issue. Just a guess, though. I wish I could get a little
farther along in the boot sequence so I could look at the dmesg output.
Thanks, Brian.
Chris
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