What I'm saying is that we know what the problem is and that is GRUB can't find the .conf file period. Your solution lies in getting GRUB to find the .conf file.
On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 15:45, Ashley M. Kirchner wrote: > Otto Haliburton wrote: > > >Let's analyze it. Grub needs the grub.conf file. You deleted hdb and > >now Grub can't find the .conf file. So you need to do something that > >points GRUB to grub.conf. So maybe you had a link or something else > >that pointed GRUB to the .conf file. > > > You're not reading everything I'm telling you guys: THERE IS > NOTHING ON hdb! Everything is on hda. hdb is completely devoid of > information but for the lost+found folder, nothing else. In fact, when > the system was originally installed, it ONLY had hda, and it worked fine > and booted fine. Months later I added hdb as a backup drive, and used > it to manually copy stuff from one drive to the other. Nothing was > moved, no partitions changed, all the system files and OS in general > stayed on hda. As time went by, we started shuffling things around on > the OTHER drives you see in the df output, hdb was never made an active > partition, except for when it was needed for backup. Now that I removed > it, grub's not booting. > > -- > W | I haven't lost my mind; it's backed up on tape somewhere. > +-------------------------------------------------------------------- > Ashley M. Kirchner <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> . 303.442.6410 x130 > IT Director / SysAdmin / WebSmith . 800.441.3873 x130 > Photo Craft Laboratories, Inc. . 3550 Arapahoe Ave. #6 > http://www.pcraft.com ..... . . . Boulder, CO 80303, U.S.A. > > > > -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list