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From: | Jan Stefan |
Subject: | Re: legacy grub missed partition |
Date: | Wed, 10 Mar 2010 11:22:51 -0600 |
>On 2010/03/09 10:42 (GMT-0600) Jan Stefan composed: >> The Inode size was the problem. The first small
partition defaulted to >> a >> 128 byte Inode and worked with grub. The larger
partition defaulted to >> 256 bytes and grub did not see it. >> I chose to change the Inode size with the
mkfs.ext3 command rather >> than update grub. On 2010/03/09 Felix Miata wrote: > Change how? Do you mean recreate the filesystem, or
some way to convert to > 128 byte inode size on existing filesystem without
losing files or data? My main goal was to write a procedure to duplicate my working
Linux software on a second PC. I already had a tared version of my
partition data from the first PC so destroying the partition data was not a
problem. I recreated the filesystem with the command “mkfs.ext3
–I 128 /dev/sda2”. I then untared my filesystem archive into the partition. The legacy Grub “find” command could then find
files in (hd0,1), as expected, and menu.lst in the first partition could boot a Linux
kernel in partition two. Again thanks for the help, Jan |
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