Robert W Best wrote:
One way out is to boot SuSE with the Boot Installed System option on its installation disk, logon as root, mount the new Linux with YaST Partitioner and try again to edit its menu.lst
Robert
Not to hijack this thread or anything, but I have a question regarding this. When I use the Boot Installed System off the install disk, most things don't work, like eth0 etc. Why is this? I'm not up to speed on the boot options, and I understand things like resume or such does not work, but why doesn't ethernet lan work in this case? I do have another option on recovering a hosed grub, that is "supergrub". I've used that in the past with some success, and it is pretty good at figuring out what OS is installed where, and what to boot. Its not perfect, but actually pretty good. You loose the nice splash screens from opensuse however, but this is superficial. I suppose you could use the list it creates and modify it with the opensuse splash. Jim F -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org