On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 11:22:25AM -0600, Justin Haaheim wrote: > Hi. I've got a linux question. > > I've got a gateway system (about a year old) running RedHat 8. The > machine has a SoundBlaster Live! Value card in it which has four ports > on the back (Line in, Mic, Speaker output, Aux output). On my gateway > system (and with my digital boston speakers), the drivers/software > allowed me to select the primary speaker output to be digital (and then > I hooked my stereo up to the aux output which remained analog). Now > that I'm running linux, my aux output still works to my stereo, but I > can't figure out how to tell my drivers to give digital output to my > speakers through the main speaker out port. If you guys can give any > help, that would be greatly appreciated. STFW. [1] is the first hit on google for linux sound blaster live digital > > I've actually got a second question. I'm running Win XP and Redhat 8 on > two separate hard drives (this is the same machine) and trying to dual > boot. As it is, i can boot into either by switching which hard drive > the bios goes to in order to boot, but the GRUB booter doesn't work. > The grub booter was configured during install, and the config file is > consistent with information i've read on dual booting. When i go to > select windows to boot, it prints the commands that GRUB runs but then > just sits there. Could it be that, because both os's were installed > with their respective hard drive being the main boot hard drive, that's > why i can't dual boot? Yes. Let's assume your two harddrives are connected like this. If not, change as appropriate: controller0: hdd0 - windows hdd1 - empty controller1: hdd0 - linux hdd1 - empty The solution is: * boot linux * make a backup copy of /etc/fstab cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.good * make a working copy of /etc/fstab cp /etc/fstab /etc/fstab.new * update the entries in /etc/fstab.new by replacing all /dev/hdaX with /dev/hdcX. If there are no such references you might be lucky, because you are using mount by label. * boot linux with bash as your init program by putting this on the command line: "init=/bin/bash". If you don't know how to do this, send the /boot/grub/menu.lst to the list and I will help you. That file does not contain any sensitive information. * mount the root partition read-write mount -w -o remount / * copy the new fstab cp /etc/fstab.new /etc/fstab * mount the root partition read-only mount -r -o remount / * set the harddrive where you installed Windows as the first harddrive. * install grub on a floppy disk to have as backup * boot windows using floppy * boot linux using floppy * install grub on the harddrive If this did frighten you, come to the next install fest. Cheers, florin 1. http://www.euronet.nl/~mailme/ -- "If it's not broken, let's fix it till it is." 41A9 2BDE 8E11 F1C5 87A6 03EE 34B3 E075 3B90 DFE4 -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20021029/18955cc4/attachment.pgp