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| Hi, I've just gone through the installation manual, and have installed a stage 3 Gentoo. When I boot, I'm getting this message: Booting 'Gentoo Linux (Genkernel)' root (hd0,0) Filesystem type is etx2fs, partition type 0x83 kernel (hd0,0)/boot/kernel-2.4.20-gentoo-r8 root=/dev/hda3 Error 15: File not found. The image is distorted, and when I press enter, I get the boot menu, but the image is even worse and the is no splash image. I've checked grub.conf and other things, but I can't find any possible errors. Please help! Jakob |
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| On Thu, 04 Dec 2003 21:57:19 +0100, Jakob Rohde wrote: > Hi, > > I've just gone through the installation manual, and have installed a stage 3 > Gentoo. > > When I boot, I'm getting this message: > > Booting 'Gentoo Linux (Genkernel)' > > root (hd0,0) > > Filesystem type is etx2fs, partition type 0x83 This is your typo etx2fs? should be ext2fs > kernel (hd0,0)/boot/kernel-2.4.20-gentoo-r8 root=/dev/hda3 > > Error 15: File not found. > > The image is distorted, and when I press enter, I get the boot menu, but the > image is even worse and the is no splash image. > > I've checked grub.conf and other things, but I can't find any possible > errors. > and /etc/fstab? and you have compiled proper filesystems e.g. ext2fs resierfs whatever you use? |
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| So anyway, it was like, 21:57 CET Dec 04 2003, you know? Oh, and, yeah, Jakob Rohde was all like, "Dude, [..] > root (hd0,0) > > Filesystem type is etx2fs, partition type 0x83 > kernel (hd0,0)/boot/kernel-2.4.20-gentoo-r8 root=/dev/hda3 > > Error 15: File not found. What does your partition table look like? Is there a /boot on hda1? (If you've created a separate boot partition, you don't actually need the /boot part of the path, you can just make it "/kernel.." since the image will be at the root of that partition. There's usually a /boot/boot symlink, pointing back to /boot, so that you can use either method.) Did you copy the kernel image to that file name, or do you by any chance have a "bzImage" in /boot instead? Are you certain you had /boot mounted when you did copy it, or did the kernel actually end up in the mount point on your root partition instead? > The image is distorted, and when I press enter, I get the boot menu, > but the image is even worse and the is no splash image. This probably isn't related. What you can do at that point (the boot menu) tho is to get a grub "shell" prompt and use it to see what's on the partitions and try to find your boot image that way. As far as the weird graphics, I dunno. I have them too on one of my boxen, but since it doesn't normally have a monitor attached, I don't care so much. I'm guessing some compatibility issues with grub and the cheap nvidia card in it. hth. -- Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana. Perth ---> * 23:13:32 up 21:18, 5 users, load average: 2.05, 2.08, 2.02 $ cat /dev/bollocks Registered Linux user #261729 leverage plug-and-play supply-chains |
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