On Thursday 27 January 2005 9:11 pm, Doug B wrote:
On Thursday 27 January 2005 07:39 pm, Trey Sizemore wrote:
I've installed SUSE 9.2 on my machine but omitted the boot loader. What is the method to do so in rescue mode? I tried:
#chroot /mnt/sysimage
but this doesn't exist so I can't even get to 'grub-install'
I never tried from rescue, but if you have the cd/dvd, boot to repair mode. On boot select installation > choose language > choose repair installed system.
I've had to call upon grub-install in a non-working environment a number of times and finally figured out how to do it pretty reliably. In fact, you can not only do it using the SuSE install CDs; you can do it from any CD that boots up a Linux shell, such as the ones on the Ultimate Boot CD (a gem in itself -- see http://www.ultimatebootcd.com.) Here's how: 1. Mount your root partition to a subdirectory of the current root, e.g.: mount /mnt /dev/hda2 2. Change the root to that subdirectory: chroot /mnt 3. Mount all partitions that are mountable in that environment: mount -a 4. Call grub-install, e.g.: /usr/sbin/grub-install That's it! If you think you might not remember this procedure, print it out; if it's stored in a file on your computer, you might not be able to get to that file! Paul