![]() I booted into a different Linux installation and pondered how to make repairs. ![]() I make sure that it is enabled and that it reboots the system. Fortunately, I always foil the desires of certain distros that disable ctrl+alt+delete, or make it behave like Windows and open a services manager. “Press any key to exit” landed at a blinking cursor on a black screen. ![]() I don’t know exactly which operations gummed up /dev/sdb, which would be good to know. How did this happen? I was installing Voyage Linux on a compact flash card, and while I was messing around with GParted and other filesystem tools I accidentally ran some commands on /dev/sdb, my main hard disk, instead of /dev/sdc, the compact flash card. ![]() Figure 1 (above) shows the cheery message that greeted me at boot. Well there I was, rebuilding a router and having a good time when I accidentally damaged the partition table on my main Linux installation, which is a GUID partition table, or GPT. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |