to pba prompt(i dont know what it is) and no matter what idid i could not get out of it.so i restarted the system and i cant find any boot loader. i ve chosen grub as the boot loader.I was not given any option to store a boot disk.so i dont have boot floppy.please help me as i am a newcomer to this and i am pretty much confused.please tell how to find my grub and how to boot into linux.please help me.pleeeeeeeeeeeease.

red hat crisis
Started by
novice1583
, Feb 25 2005 09:41 AM
#1
Posted 25 February 2005 - 09:41 AM

to pba prompt(i dont know what it is) and no matter what idid i could not get out of it.so i restarted the system and i cant find any boot loader. i ve chosen grub as the boot loader.I was not given any option to store a boot disk.so i dont have boot floppy.please help me as i am a newcomer to this and i am pretty much confused.please tell how to find my grub and how to boot into linux.please help me.pleeeeeeeeeeeease.
#2
Posted 25 February 2005 - 09:44 AM

i was able to boot into windows xp .
#3
Posted 26 February 2005 - 03:55 AM

please tell me how to continue with the installation.I even tried upgrading but it gets stuck at "finding packages"and doesnt move forwar.please tell me how to continue with the installation.
#4
Posted 24 March 2005 - 05:18 PM

Oh I'm sure there is some pretty good manual on that somewhere...
Sorry, I had to say that
I somehow get the impression this isn't the most linux-oriented site.
( Dead give-away, the OS-forum is subdivided into
Windows, Windows and other OSses, not Linux and the rest
)
I've tried installing some other distribution of linux for 14 days in a row.
It never worked as it should. My advice... leave it. It's more trouble than
it's worth.
I hope somebody else can help you, I'm useless.
Good luck!
Ojo


I somehow get the impression this isn't the most linux-oriented site.
( Dead give-away, the OS-forum is subdivided into
Windows, Windows and other OSses, not Linux and the rest

I've tried installing some other distribution of linux for 14 days in a row.
It never worked as it should. My advice... leave it. It's more trouble than
it's worth.

I hope somebody else can help you, I'm useless.
Good luck!
Ojo
#5
Posted 31 March 2005 - 02:28 AM

You should be able to boot up again from the first Redhat CD and begin your installation again, during the installation it will give you the option to re-install the bootloader and also make a bootable floppy for emergencies.
#6
Posted 04 April 2005 - 05:26 PM

First off it sounds like you wound up with a Corrupted second disc. I've had this problem before. When you download a linux distro always make sure you get the most recent version from the companies main distro mirrors. If theres an error with Redhat it would've been found with the media check that runs on installation. If you didn't run the media check the first time you used the CDs, you should have. This ensures that you won't get to the last disk and become insanely frustrated with the distro and throw it away.
Second you say redhat linux 8. Redhat Linux reached its end of life cycle this year. That means there will be no more security updates for potentially dangerous security holes. You should definately consider trashing Redhat and upgrading to the new project (Fedora Core RC3 - If not familiar with SELinux Firewall you should use FC RC2) to ensure that your computer is secure.
You can find the newest Redhat Project for Fedora Core at http://fedora.redhat.com/.
Also you may consider using the free version of Redhat Enterprise Linux 3 called CentOS available at http://www.centos.org/. Being a enterprise version it tends to be much more stable and suitable for heavy use.
Second you say redhat linux 8. Redhat Linux reached its end of life cycle this year. That means there will be no more security updates for potentially dangerous security holes. You should definately consider trashing Redhat and upgrading to the new project (Fedora Core RC3 - If not familiar with SELinux Firewall you should use FC RC2) to ensure that your computer is secure.
You can find the newest Redhat Project for Fedora Core at http://fedora.redhat.com/.
Also you may consider using the free version of Redhat Enterprise Linux 3 called CentOS available at http://www.centos.org/. Being a enterprise version it tends to be much more stable and suitable for heavy use.
Similar Topics
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users
As Featured On:






