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authorNeill Miller <neillm@thecodefactory.org>2004-08-21 22:54:20 +0000
committerNeill Miller <neillm@thecodefactory.org>2004-08-21 22:54:20 +0000
commit0a20b1d8460a312064641883045fc48552ec24c0 (patch)
tree1392022e6a3576d3e8132cf2217c27dfc2f77b77 /Hurd
parent59d37b28e31e3e0ebe084d16cdbbc50d8d63b53a (diff)
none
Diffstat (limited to 'Hurd')
-rw-r--r--Hurd/InstallNotes.mdwn2
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Hurd/InstallNotes.mdwn b/Hurd/InstallNotes.mdwn
index 6c58cfbb..dd8cd3d5 100644
--- a/Hurd/InstallNotes.mdwn
+++ b/Hurd/InstallNotes.mdwn
@@ -89,6 +89,8 @@ Thus, continuing with the above example and assuming that the first drive in the
grub> kernel /boot/gnumach.gz root=device:hd2s1 -s
[Multiboot-elf, ...]
+NOTE: If after running this command you see GRUB Error 28, according to the [GRUB Troubleshooting](http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub.html#Troubleshooting) documentation, you may need to tell grub that you have more memory by using the uppermem command. For example, if you have 256MB of RAM and running **displaymem** within GRUB shows that you have less memory than that, you can type **uppermem 262144** to tell GRUB about the additional memory.
+
Next, the root file system server and the exec server must be loaded. This is done using GRUB's boot module capability. The parameters are the semantics by which the kernel passes some important values to the servers.
grub> module /hurd/ext2fs.static \