You may have to re-install Grub if the boot loader was damaged or destroyed, for example by installing an incompatible operating system.
Installing the Grub boot loader. The 2nd and 3rd steps can be done using a single command, grub-install. Alternatively, the 3rd step can be done using the grub command. All disks and partitions are numbered starting with 0 rather than 1. Extended partitions are counted from 4, regardless of the actual number of primary partitions on the hard disk.
The first number indicates the disk; the second number if present indicates the partition. If the Grub boot loader hasn't been installed on your hard disk, you should create the configuration file before installing the boot loader. This file contains the following information: The default boot partition. How long to wait before automatically booting the default partition. Optionally, a nice splash image to show while waiting for the user's input. The various boot partitions which the user can choose.
Example: The numbers before each line should not be written. They refer to the explanations after the sample file. Explanations: 1. By default, boot the 1st partition listed below. Remember that Grub starts counting with 0, not 1.
Wait 10 seconds for user input before booting default. Show splash image while waiting for user input optional. Name of 1st possible boot partition. In this case, it's the default boot partition see line 1. Indicate root partition, using Grub naming conventions.
Omit if you want text-only boot. Omit for less verbose booting. Location of initial ramdisk initrd or initramfs , using conventional naming system.
Name of 2nd possible boot partition. See also the comment about UUIDs in line 6. Advanced Search. Note: If you didn't migrate your openSUSE account in June , you will need to create a new account with a different email! Page 1 of 2 1 2 Last Jump to page: Results 1 to 10 of Thread: Due to lack of concentration, I inadvertantly ran PClinux 's "install. After grinding, it started mentioning about generating something for sda13, which is my last partition So I bailed before it got too far.
I even tried "rescue" option on the DVD, command prompt, and grub commands to reinstall via "setup No luck. Then I tried to use Super Grub Disk. Didn't change a thing. So obviously it's bypassing stage 1 and 2 files, using it's native Grub4DOS code.
But then I tried Yast-Bootloader to reinstall Grub's files. No difference. Then I used the advanced part to "write bootloader code to disk" No difference. Even tried "propose a new boot scheme" or whatnot Re: While running Thanks for the reply. After my boo-boo. Stage1 still has it's original date.
I agree that the.
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