В Sat, 01 Feb 2014 10:38:18 -0500
Anton Aylward
On 02/01/2014 10:31 AM, Andrey Borzenkov wrote:
В Sat, 01 Feb 2014 10:25:12 -0500 Anton Aylward
пишет: On 02/01/2014 09:44 AM, Andrey Borzenkov wrote:
Also run os-prober (literal command) - does it print anything? After you run os-prober, take las half an hour of messages from /var/log/messages and post here as well.
# uname -a Linux BigBoy 3.11.6-4-desktop #1 SMP PREEMPT Wed Oct 30 18:04:56 UTC 2013 (e6d4a27) x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux # os-prober #
That's not what I asked you.
I'm reluctant to post about 2,000 lines of of os-prober unsuccessfully checking all the 20+ 'partitions' in my LVM for a variety of combinations of things that it doesn't find.
If you want me to post results here, or to a dropbox, please be more specific.
I do not care where as long as they are available.
What am I supposed to be looking for?
Probably nothing. It is much easier to look at the program log than ask thousand questions without getting clear answer. In any case - you can always boot your previous OS from grub2 command line. On grub2 menu press 'c', then use linux16 (hdX,Y)/vmlinuz-xxx kernel options you normally use initrd16 (hdX,Y)/initrd-xxx boot You can write down kernel options from menu.lst of "lost" system that you can access. To find out drive number you can simply look at directory content ls (hd0,1) ls (hd1,1) ... replace partition number with *your* /boot partition number. (If you had provided bootinfoscript results all this information would be easily available). grub2 counts partitions like Linux starting from 1, not from 0 as grub legacy. So partition numbers are the same as in Linux. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org