Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Linux won't boot
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Linux won't boot Post 302236910 by Neo on Tuesday 16th of September 2008 02:21:08 PM
Old 09-16-2008
Perhaps you can post a copy of your lilo.conf file (assuming you use lilo)?#

LILO (boot loader - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Solaris (9) won't boot!

Hi, I've just bought an Ultra 60 running solaris 9 (or so I've been led to believe). When I start up, it looks for a (presumably) domain/network to hook up to and the following messages are displayed: Boot device: net file and args: Network link setup failed Please check cable and try... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: alarmcall
3 Replies

2. AIX

server won't boot

Hi all , i was trying to upgrade firmware on machine 7028-6E4 and it failed . Now machine does not boot anymore , i can not get SMC menu either ... What are my options ? Thanks, Rahim (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rahim
1 Replies

3. Solaris

nfsd won't start at boot up

Hi Inexplicably, nfsd no longer starts automatically on our Sun boxes running Solaris 9, so that 'automount' no longer functions automatically. The problem first manifested itself when we could not access files on any of the nfs automounted directories in our LAN after one of the servers (say... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: dcshungu
19 Replies

4. Solaris

cannot find boot device and won't boot off cdrom

I'm running solaris 2.5.1. My main development server is DEAD, i can't even boot off the cdrom, it powers up, acts like it is starting the boot process but then says cannot find boot device. I've done the search here on this site and saw the other posts, but at the ok prompt it won't even let me... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kymberm
3 Replies

5. Solaris

Ultra 60 won't boot

I just was given an Ultra 60 that I'm trying to get started so that I can re-load the system with Solaris 10. I can't seem to get the system to boot past the initial memory check. I've tried to do an Stop-A to get to the eeprom, but can't do that. My next step is to try to send a break from the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: zosojohnny
0 Replies

6. AIX

won't mount /usr...won't boot fully

Hello: NOOB here. I attempted to use smit mkcd. Failed on first attempt, not enough space. 2nd attempt tried to place iso on /usr, not enough space there. Cleanup ran for about 5 minutes after aborting. Now AIX won't boot. LCD display on 7029-6E3 says: 0517 MOUNT /USR. Attempted to boot from CD... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbird
11 Replies

7. Solaris

Change IP and server won't boot

We changed the IP address (gateway, defaultrouter, nameserver) on our Solaris9 server and moved it to another datacenter. Now the server won't boot and continues to reboot endlessly. No, we didn't use sys-config but manually changed hosts, netmasks, defaultrouter and resolv.conf. There is a... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: booshame
3 Replies

8. SCO

SCO UNIX Won't Boot

Our system is not booting up properly. It keeps going to this screen: Enter Run Level (0-6, s or S): I tried to hit all nos# 0-6 is just goes to hung state. Tried s or S & it brings me to single user mode. I've checked the file systems & found out that all three had 98%. I tried to... (86 Replies)
Discussion started by: jedimaster
86 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

New kernel won't boot

I compiled new kernel in linux 10.04 called linux-2.6.26.8-xenomai, it runs alongside the other kernel, but when I want to boot it I get an error message saying: Missing modules (cat /proc/modules; ls /dev) ALERT! /dev/sda5 does not exist. After making the modules and headers I made the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: mdop
4 Replies

10. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Linux on vmware won't boot due to corrupt library file!

We have an issue here: The libc.so.6 file (link) is corrupted and it causes the system unbootable. It even doesn't boot to single user mode. How can we boot the system to fix the library file? Or is there any other solutions for this issue? Here are some boot messages:... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: aixlover
6 Replies
GRUBBY(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 GRUBBY(8)

NAME
grubby - command line tool for configuring grub, lilo, and elilo SYNOPSIS
grubby [--add-kernel=kernel-path] [--args=args] [--bad-image-okay] [--boot-filesystem=bootfs] [--bootloader-probe] [--config-file path] [--copy-default] [--default-kernel] [--grub] [--info=kernel-path] [--initrd=initrd-path] [--lilo] [--make-default] [-o path] [--remove-kernel=kernel-path] [--set-default=kernel-path] [--title=entry-title] DESCRIPTION
grubby is a command line tool for updating and displaying information about the configuration files for the grub, lilo, elilo (ia64), and yaboot (powerpc) boot loaders. It is primarily designed to be used from scripts which install new kernels and need to find information about the current boot environment. On Intel x86 platforms, grub is the default bootloader and the configuration file is in /boot/grub/grub.conf. On Intel ia64 platforms, elilo mode is used and the default location for the configuration file is /boot/grub/grub.conf. On PowerPC platforms, yaboot parsing is used and the configuration file should be in /etc/yaboot.conf. There are a number of ways to specify the kernel used for --info, --remove-kernel, and --update-kernel. Specificying DEFAULT or ALL selects the default entry and all of the entries, respectively. If a comma separated list of numbers is given, the boot entries indexed by those numbers are selected. Finally, the title of a boot entry may be specified by using TITLE=title as the argument; all entries with that title are used. OPTIONS
--add-kernel=kernel-path Add a new boot entry for the kernel located at kernel-path. --args=kernel-args When a new kernel is added, this specifies the command line arguments which should be passed to the kernel by default (note they are merged with the arguments from the template if --copy-default is used). When --update-kernel is used, this specifies new arguments to add to the argument list. Multiple, space separated arguments may be used. If an argument already exists the new value replaces the old values. The root= kernel argument gets special handling if the configuration file has special handling for specifying the root filesystem (like lilo.conf does). --bad-image-okay When grubby is looking for a entry to use for something (such as a template or a default boot entry) it uses sanity checks, such as ensuring that the kernel exists in the filesystem, to make sure entries that obviously won't work aren't selected. This option over- rides that behavior, and is designed primarily for testing. --boot-filesystem=bootfs The grub boot loader expects file paths listed in it's configuration path to be relative to the top of the filesystem they are on, rather then relative to the current root filesystem. By default grubby searches the list of currently mounted filesystems to deter- mine this. If this option is given grubby acts as if the specified filesystem was the filesystem containing the kernel (this option is designed primarily for testing). --bootloader-probe grubby tries to determine if grub or lilo is currently installed. When one of those bootloaders is found the name of that bootloader is displayed on stdout. Both could be installed (on different devices), and grubby will print out the names of both bootloaders, one per line. The probe for grub requires a commented out boot directive grub.conf identical to the standard directive in the lilo configuration file. If this is not present grubby will assume grub is not installed (note that anaconda places this directive in grub.conf files it creates). This option is only available on ia32 platforms. --config-file=path Use path as the configuration file rather then the default. --copy-default grubby will copy as much information (such as kernel arguments and root device) as possible from the current default kernel. The kernel path and initrd path will never be copied. --default-kernel Display the full path to the current default kernel and exit. --elilo Use an elilo style configuration file. --grub Use a grub style configuration file instead of lilo style. This is the default on ia32 platforms. --info=kernel-path Display information on all boot entries which match kernel-path. I --initrd=initrd-path Use initrd-path as the path to an initial ram disk for a new kernel being added. --lilo Use a lilo style configuration file. --make-default Make the new kernel entry being added the default entry. --remove-args=kernel-args The arguments specified by kernel-args are removed from the kernels specified by --update-kernel. The root argument gets special handling for configuration files that support separate root filesystem configuration. --remove-kernel=kernel-path Removes all boot entries which match kernel-path. This may be used along with --add-kernel, in which case the new kernel being added will never be removed. --set-default=kernel-path The first entry which boots the specified kernel is made the default boot entry. --title=entry-title When a new kernel entry is added entry-title is used as the title (lilo label) for the entry. If entry-title is longer then maximum length allowed by the bootloader (15 for lilo, unlimited for grub and elilo) the title is shortened to a (unique) entry. --update-kernel=kernel-path The entries for kernels matching kernel-path are updated. Currently the only items that can be updated is the kernel argument list, which is modified via the --args and --remove-args options. --version Display the version of grubby being run and then exit immediately. --yaboot Use an yaboot style configuration file. BUGS
The command line syntax is more then a little baroque. This probably won't be fixed as grubby is only intended to be called from shell scripts which can get it right. SEE ALSO
grub(8), lilo(8), yaboot(8), mkinitrd(8) AUTHOR
Erik Troan <ewt@redhat.com> 4th Berkeley Distribution Thu Jun 21 2002 GRUBBY(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:30 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy