On 4/24/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
[...]
> In the screen shot provided note that it appears grub is expecting an
> intramfs and only lists those types of devices, rejecting both
> (hd0,0) and /dev/sda3.
>
> http://www.jtan.com/~re
On 2/29/08, andrea <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On ven, 2008-02-29 at 13:00 -0500, Don Jerman wrote:
>
> > When the usb disk is attached after boot the BIOS doesn't give it a HD
> > number in the series 0x80,0x81, etc, where 0x80 = (hd0) in grub or
>
On 2/28/08, andrea <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On gio, 2008-02-28 at 19:23 +0100, KH wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > never tried that and might only be a temporary workaround. You could
> > install grub in the mbr of both disk and then point them only to your
> > internal disk. That way you should always
I've had problems with disk presentation order changing (fairly
randomly) when USB disks are attached during boot. Apparently there's
a race between the SCSI controller and the USB controller(s). If you
attach the USB disk later the SCSI stuff has all been discovered so of
course it gets allocate
I've had problems with disk presentation order changing (fairly
randomly) when USB disks are attached during boot. Apparently there's
a race between the SCSI controller and the USB controller(s). If you
attach the USB disk later the SCSI stuff has all been discovered so of
course it gets allocate
I personally prefer JFS to XFS and have used it for years on my
servers and laptop with no problem other than hardware errors (and if
the hardware fails the fs will not help you). I had system board
problems in the laptop and a bad RAID controller in the server this
last year :(. Other than that
On 10/20/07, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello Don Jerman,
>
> > So / and /boot will be smallish physical partitions - I use the
> > minimum size for /boot and around 10G for root,
>
> When did 10GB become small for a root partition? I have a 400MB
On 10/19/07, Thufir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 10:26:49 +0200, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
>
> > hda1: Windows
> > hda2: Linux (/boot)
> > hda3: Linux (/)
> > hda4: PV for LVM (PV = Physical Volume)
> > hdb1: PV for LVM
> >
> > The two PVs will be assigned to one Volume Group (VG),
On 10/4/07, Rafael Barrera Oro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> kernel (hd0,0)/boot/kernel-genkernel-x86-2.6.22-gentoo-r8 root=/dev/hdb3
try:
kernel (hd0,0)/kernel-gengenkernel-x86-2.6.22-gentoo-r8 root=/dev/hdb3
why:
/boot is where you mount (hd0,0) while gentoo is running, but while
grub is runnin
On 9/5/07, CESAR GAVIDIA <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Greetings brothers, I have a laptop Hp Pavilion dv1000, this brings
> incorporated a webcam and a microphone, which have been able to fail to
> utilize.
>
Sam Revich had a driver for the webcam on my HP dv9000t, which allowed
me to get images.
On 9/3/07, Alan E. Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thank you. I have solved the problem for now, but live in fear that there
> is something untoward going in on my hardware.
>
Quite possible. It can also be caused by misconfiguring kernel
drivers. I recently (accidently) selected the ATI agpa
On 8/30/07, fire-eyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm using xorg 7.2.0 with open source drivers on an ati card. How would
> I calibrate my monitor? i.e. what a photographer or graphics person
> would want to to, do ensure I'm seeing accurate colors on my screen?
>
you could take the trouble to lea
On 8/20/07, Dan Cowsill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I started having problems with my boot password not too long after I
> changed it and I stumbled upon something altogether weird.
>
> The following is a copy of what grub is giving me for an md5 hash:
>
> --
>
> grub> md5crypt
>
> Password:
On 8/10/07, James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello to all,
>
> I'm in need of a portable video camera(or rig), such as the
> sony SR82, but one that is gentoo friendly
> for video transfer. Hopefully I can find a video
> camera that transfers directly to a gentoo
> sytem via usb 2.0? After my exp
On 8/1/07, Abraham Marín Pérez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dan Cowsill escribió:
> > Is there any specific process to or problems one might encounter as a
> > result of switching from a Genkernel built kernel over to a manually
> > built kernel?
> >
> As far as I can think of it would be enough ge
It appears there are still apic issues under x86_64 SMP, so look at
noapic if you continue to have hangups (you may have this AND heat
problems).
Also look at the AMD_64 architecture forums at gentoo.org. I'm not
familiar with the Acer peripherals but that forum helped me with my
HP9000z.
On 7/3
If it's brand-new, have you ever installed Linux on this particular
processor/motherboard combination? I had a problem with freezeups
with my TurionX2 laptop until I used -noapic on the kernel line.
Nothing much to do with load, except that more work = more chance of
encountering the problem.
I a
On 7/5/07, Dirk Heinrichs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
As I wrote in my first answer to this thread (which somehow didn't make it
to the list, yet), the problem is (IMHO) with /boot not beeing mounted at
all.
Yes, if you followed the Gentoo install instructions closely /boot is
not mounted
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