[PlanetCCRMA] New User: FC1 Install (booting) Problems and possible solutions

Louis Lam lshoujun@yahoo.com
Fri Aug 27 18:26:02 2004


Hi,

Disconnecting the SATA Drive allowed the ccrma kernel
to boot up.

I have the following in /etc/fstab

LABEL=/                 /                       ext3  
 defaults        1 1
LABEL=/DeMuDi           /DeMuDi                 ext3  
 defaults        1 2
/dev/sda1               /Music                  vfat  
 defaults        0 0
none                    /dev/pts                devpts
 gid=5,mode=620  0 0
none                    /proc                   proc  
 defaults        0 0
none                    /dev/shm                tmpfs 
 defaults        0 0
/dev/hda5               swap                    swap  
 defaults        0 0
/dev/cdrom              /mnt/cdrom             
udf,iso9660 noauto,owner,kudzu,ro 0 0
/dev/fd0                /mnt/floppy             auto  
 noauto,owner,kudzu 0 0

Is there something I can do to influence the ccrma not
to read hde?

Thanks,
Louis


 --- Fernando Pablo Lopez-Lezcano
<nando@ccrma.Stanford.EDU> wrote: 
> On Thu, 2004-08-26 at 19:40, Louis Lam wrote:
> > > My guess is that the ccrma kernel is detecting
> the drives in a different
> > > order and/or naming them differently than the
> original redhat kernel
> > > that was used to install fc1. 
> > > 
> > > Exactly what drives do you currently have
> attached to the system? On
> > > which one do you have fc1 installed? Also, if
> you have multiple installs
> > > and/or multiple drives it may be possible to
> confuse the boot process
> > > (depending on how the installs were done). 
> > 
> > Currently, I have 2 Disks attached to my system:
> > 
> > The first disk is a normal ide disk, detected as
> > /dev/hda during the installation process of FC1.
> The
> > OS is installed onto one of the partitions on this
> > disk /dev/hda2.
> > 
> > The Second disk is a SATA disk. Detected as
> /dev/sda.
> > No FC1 elements were installed onto this disk, i
> > intend to make it a storage for audio data.
> 
> Something I'd try is temporarily disconnecting the
> sata disk to see if
> that is the cause of the booting problem (as I
> suspect). What do you
> have in /etc/fstab?
> 
> > All i can tell you now is that i do notice that
> the
> > boot process hangs right after a line that says:
> > 
> > hde: attached ide-disk driver
> > 
> > I don't suppose I have a hde on my system.
> 
> That's probably the sata drive, which is now (with
> the new drivers
> included in the newer kernel), hde instead of sda...
> -- Fernando
> 
> 
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