On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 10:16 AM, Nikolaus Rath Nikolaus@rath.org wrote:
Fedora uses a patched version of GRUB Legacy. It can read / partitions on LVM but the /boot partition still needs to be ext* on disk.
How come that Fedora sticks with GRUB Legacy? One of my reasons for wanting to try Fedora was to get quicker access to new features, so I'm really surprised to find that the first thing that I get in contact with is an outdated GRUB...
Not sure about the exact reasons for this.
There is 128 MB of free space. I tell the installer to use all the space that's available. It claims that there is not enough space left.
In Fedora we use an application called preupgrade for distro upgrades. During those upgrades the installer downloads the new kernel images to /boot before the upgrade is performed. On previous versions there has been problems where the /boot was not large enough and upgrades failed. So from F12 the recommended /boot size is 500MB to avoid such issues.
Ugh. So I have hundreds of free GBs in my LVM VGs, but I won't be able to install Fedora? Is there no way around this?
Well you have two options I think,
1. the obvious first, resize your LVMs to free 500 MB and use it as /boot 2. use an external drive (even small USB drives should work) as your /boot. I haven't done this personally but there are many on this list who do that. You should be able to find some discussions about this in the archives.
However there is a more adventurous option, you can use option 2 above to boot the netinstall iso but then actually install Fedora with grub2 from the repos. That way you get a Fedora install which uses grub2. I think there are a few pages on the wiki about this. As far as I recall there are some people on the list who use grub2. So maybe you can search in the fedoraproject wiki and then start a new thread asking how others do it.
Hope these help.