Bug#473340: grub-probe: "cannot find a GRUB drive for ...."
Carlo Fusco
fusco.carlo at gmail.com
Fri Apr 4 17:48:20 UTC 2008
I can exactly confirm the same bug in my system. I have t2 disks sata,
sda1 that is mount in my home dir and sdb1 that conteins the operating
system. Some time during boot they get inverted (I imagine is a bios
issue) and therefore initiramfs stops and drops me on a shell. Usually
a reboot is enough to fix this problem
Here some more info.
/boot/grub/device.map.
(hd0) /dev/sda
grub-probe -t device /
/dev/sdb1
grub-probe -t device /boot
/dev/sdb1
grub-probe -t fs /boot
grub-probe: error: cannot find a GRUB drive for /dev/sdb1.
-- System Information:
Debian Release: lenny/sid
APT prefers unstable
APT policy: (500, 'unstable')
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)
Kernel: Linux 2.6.24-1-amd64 (SMP w/1 CPU core)
Locale: LANG=en_US, LC_CTYPE=en_US (charmap=ISO-8859-1)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash
Versions of packages grub depends on:
ii grub-common 1.96+20080228-1 GRand Unified Bootloader, version
grub recommends no packages.
-- no debconf information
--
Carlo Fusco
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