[log in to unmask]" type="cite">Hi Steven,
I was looking at something similar to this myself recently and came across both of the issues that you mention. I was using a kickstart file for the install and this is what worked for me...
To get around the issue where the install image wasn't found I actually copied the DVD iso file into the root directory of the USB stick created by unetbootin. That allowed the install to continue.
To get around the issue of the bootloader being installed onto the USB key being /sda I updated the kickstart file. There is a line starting bootloader to which I added the following parameter and value "--driveorder=sdb,sda" which as you might guess swaps the order that the disks are expected to be used. Saved mucking about with grub as it just worked. No need to have the USB key in after the install.
Regards,Geoff Newson.
On 11 March 2013 13:17, Pat Riehecky <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
That is a good idea!On 03/10/2013 06:06 AM, Steven Haigh wrote:
On 10/03/2013 9:05 PM, Steven Haigh wrote:
On 9/03/2013 7:56 AM, Pat Riehecky wrote:
Network Install Images:
http://ftp.scientificlinux.org/linux/scientific/6rolling/i386/images/boot.iso
http://ftp.scientificlinux.org/linux/scientific/6rolling/x86_64/images/boot.iso
I believe these should be:
http://ftp.scientificlinux.org/linux/scientific/6rolling/i386/os/images/boot.iso
http://ftp.scientificlinux.org/linux/scientific/6rolling/x86_64/os/images/boot.iso
For what its worth, I just used unetbootin to copy the DVD to a USB
stick to try the install, but it failed saying it can't find the install
image.
I'm currently trying it again but with the network install ISO instead...
Ok, so this time the install went ok using the NFS method and the DVD ISO mounted on a network connected machine.
The bootloader was installed to /dev/sda - problem is - this was the USB stick. It doesn't look like it installed the bootloader to /dev/sdb - which would have been the SSD drive on this netbook.
So, I left the USB key in until grub appeared, then removed the USB stick. This made the SSD come up as /dev/sda
From there on, I needed to edit /etc/grub.conf to properly show the correct drive layout of the system:
root(hd0,0) instead of root(hd1,0)
Then run:
grub-install --recheck /dev/sda
Then install grub again just to be sure:
grub-install /dev/sda
Then I could boot ok.
I'm wondering if it is worthwhile checking if /dev/sda is a removable disk / USB stick, and if so, move onto the next as default? Or maybe prompt?
Unfortunately this behavior comes from upstream, I fear submitting a bugzilla is the best recommendation I can offer.
Pat
--
Pat Riehecky
Scientific Linux developer
http://www.scientificlinux.org/
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