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I'm trying to overhaul a server and have run into a weird boot problem. Can't readily find the solution online--other than suggestions that perhaps I should switch to another distro, but I don't want to give up quite yet because I spent a lot of time on this installation. Basically I bought a new hard drive, downloaded SUSE 10.0 from the gatech site, and used my desktop PC's motherboard to get everything loaded and configured. Then I tried plugging the hard drive (actually, two drives, RAID1) into my file server's motherboard. No luck: I get "Waiting for device /dev/hda2 to appear" and it gives up trying to mount the root fs, dumping me into a primitive shell. The IDE interface doesn't show up in /proc/devices. SUSE's rescue CD is quite useless. Amazingly so, in fact: it doesn't even have a copy of fdisk! If you try running the installation diagnostic, it fails to recognize a root fs in anything other than a top-level partition (forget RAID, forget lvm). However one quirk about the rescue CD is this: if I boot it up in rescue mode, the kernel will recognize my IDE bus and I can manually mount the filesystems. So far as I can tell, it's the *same* 2.6 kernel image as the one previously installed on the hard drive. I'm stumped, after tinkering a lot with command lines to GRUB. Where might I turn to come up with ideas, other than to trash this setup and switch to Red Hat? The file-server's motherboard has an old BIOS but I have no reason to believe this is the problem. -rich
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