Error 15 File Not Found Vmware
Contents |
Ek0nomik Member From: Wisconsin Registered: 2008-05-01 Posts: 7 [SOLVED] Grub Error 15: File Not Found Well I didn't expect this to be the
Error 15 File Not Found Cisco Asa
error which threw me off guard.fdisk -l reveals:/dev/sda1 BOOT.FLAG Linux/dev/sda2 error 15 file not found unable to boot an image Linux/dev/sda3 Linux
Error 15 File Not Found Windows Xp
swap / Solarisblkid:/dev/sda1: UUID="484d3c32-aae5-43a3-bb4b-cbaaab26f96a" TYPE="ext2"/dev/sda2: UUID="3525ec64-d3dc-4bec-b9d2-172633f4a3a4" SEC_TYPE="ext2" TYPE="ext3"/dev/sda3: TYPE="swap" UUID: ""1d1b29b3-92b9-4823-aca6-06d3e51ed825"loop0 and loop1, no clue what those are.So, sda1 should be /boot. sda2 should be /. sda3 https://kb.vmware.com/kb/1004574 should be swap. (I setup the partitions manually, not with the auto configure)So, I just mounted /dev/sda1 in archlive, and grub/menu.lst contains this:root (hd0,0) kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/3525ec64-d3dc-4bec-b9d2-172633f4a3a4 ro initrd /boot/kernel26.imgBut, I get this error message in grub:root (hd0,0) Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83 kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 Error 15: File not found Press any key to https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=56251 continue...Any ideas? I know it has to be something small...Also, a side question, why format /boot as ext2 instead of say something like ext3? What does ext2 have over ext3?♦ Last edited by Ek0nomik (2008-10-03 22:06:19) Offline #2 2008-10-03 18:30:26 Ek0nomik Member From: Wisconsin Registered: 2008-05-01 Posts: 7 Re: [SOLVED] Grub Error 15: File Not Found One more thing, when I go into grub and type:root (hd0,0)and root (hd0,1)they both return the same thing:Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83.Since one is ext2, and the other ext3, shouldn't it say something different? Offline #3 2008-10-03 19:10:35 SkonesMickLoud Arch Linux f@h Team Member From: The D of C Registered: 2008-09-20 Posts: 178 Re: [SOLVED] Grub Error 15: File Not Found Ek0nomik wrote:One more thing, when I go into grub and type:root (hd0,0)and root (hd0,1)they both return the same thing:Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83.Since one is ext2, and the other ext3, shouldn't it say something different?Nope. Grub sees both as ext2.As to the probl
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About http://stackoverflow.com/questions/29741257/grub-error-15-file-not-found Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up grub error 15: file not found error 15 up vote -2 down vote favorite I have a vm(on vmware fully running). But i want to do some modification and put all file system to single partition /. In my current VM i have /, /var, /tmp, /boot partition. Action performed: Attached new hard disk, formatted and created two partition (one for / and another for swap) made / as active partition for root. copied all error 15 file the files from original hard disk to new harddisk. made changes in /etc/fstab and run grub-install. detached new harddisk and created new VM using this harddisk. Now when I am starting VM, I got "Error 15: File not found" linux linux-kernel redhat grub share|improve this question edited Apr 22 '15 at 7:27 Soner Gönül 69.6k22110200 asked Apr 20 '15 at 7:04 Amit Kumar 228212 Probably grub-install was done in the wrong hd, did you specify the destination device? –Alex Apr 20 '15 at 7:46 Yes Alex, i did specified the right hd, also i booted new VM from rhel 6.5 dvd in rescue mode and executed following command. 1. chroot /mnt/sysimage 2. grub-install /dev/sda (executed successfully) Still not working. –Amit Kumar Apr 20 '15 at 7:56 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 0 down vote Just got answer while hitting and trying . This error is due to /etc/grub/grub.conf file. When we have /boot partition we don't need to give whole path for kernel for example : Kernel /< kernel version> but when we have single root partition only, means no /boot partition we need to provide compl