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Ignore me if you've already tried this but IIRC you have to do
something like this:<br>
set root=(hd0,4,a)<br>
chainloader +1<br>
<br>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 11/12/14 14:00, Steve Moon wrote:<br>
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<div>So I've got a dual-boot Linux/Windows laptop,
with a spare 80GB partition.<br>
<br>
</div>
I figured I'd fire up my spiffy new OpenBSD CD set
and install it there, which appeared to go great.<br>
<br>
</div>
Grub is the bootloader. The OpenBSD partition is set
to active, type A6, and I let the OpenBSD installer
divvy it up automatically.<br>
<br>
</div>
In grub I edited the /etc/grub.d/40* file and added an
entry for OpenBSD, run update-grub, and rebooted.<br>
<br>
As expected I got my nifty new OpenBSD boot option, but
when I pick it I get a "file not found" error from grub.
I have done extensive googling and manpage spelunking to
no effect. I've tried a number of variations on how I
specify the partition (disk 0, partition 4).<br>
<br>
</div>
<div>I then tried to use uuid instead of disk/partition
numbering, but running blkid yields a list of partitions
counting all of the openbsd ones -- so instead of just
seeing the 4 physical partitions I see something like
12, and no uuid for the openbsd partition. Specifying a
higher-than-4 partition number just results in grub
complaining about not finding the partition.<br>
<br>
</div>
I don't want to get too agressive since I occasionally
need to use Windows and my Linux setup has a lot of
customizations I was hoping to imitate in OpenBSD.<br>
<br>
</div>
Any ideas? I'm wondering if it is a 1st 1024 cylinder thing,
since I'm in the last 80GB of a 256GB SSD drive. But it
seems like I'd then get an openbsd error rather than a grub
error.<br>
<br>
</div>
The linux is Mint 14, grub is v2.0000xxxx, and yes I know grub
v1 numbers partitions from 0 while grub v2 numbers from 1
(seems like they could have either figured that out to begin
with, or just left it the same...<br>
<br>
</div>
Thanks-<br>
Steve-<br>
<br>
</div>
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