by saybonuser56 » Tue Aug 25, 2009 2:50
I apologize for forgetting to mention which version of Sabayon, I just downloaded the 64bit version of 4.2. I had the same problem when I tried the earlier 3.0 or might have been 3.5 64 bit version. The access to the NTFS drives was working correctly using the live DVD but did not work correctly once the system was installed. Right now I do not even have read access as a normal user and the only way I can look at the drives is to log in as root.
One of the other problems I ran into was an incorrect installation of Grub. This is not a problem exclusive to Sabayon but I think to every distro of Linux, at least all the ones I have tried and I have tried most of the major ones except for Slax. I built a new system back in April and ever since then I have had great difficulty with having a system that would boot after doing a Linux install. There is a major problem with incorrect drive mapping with the various distros in compairsion to how Grub maps them. Most of the distros map my drives all different with only two of them mapping them the same, but all of them are incorrect so I either get just a Grub with a flashing cursor or an error 17 at boot.
My system is as follows,
EVGA X58 mother board with Intel i7 920 processor
EVGA Geforce GTX 260 graphics card
6 GB of Corsair ddr3 memory
1000w Corsair power supply
1 SATA DVD drive
3 SATA hard drives (on the standard Intel SATA controller that is part of the X58 chipset with 6 SATA ports)
2 EIDE hard drives (on a Jmicron controller that also does the SATA raid ports
I am not sure if the hard drive mapping is done by the various distro builders in the form of a script or if it is done by the Kernel. All I know is none of them can get it correct with this mother board with the number of drives I have installed. I think that perhaps the single EIDE port supplied by the Jmicron chip set is the variable that messes up everything by being reported differently by each distro which moves all the rest of the drives around in their order. Right now there are 3 different main drive mappings and all of them are different. The order of the drives as the Bios has them is different than what Grub maps them (I checked them using the Super Grub Disk) and then the distros are all different than either the Bios or Grub. Sabayon was the weirdest in having a drive that is NTFS with a back up image for Vista on it as hda so I am certain that is where it put the boot loader but it is physically installed on either drive 3 or 4 of the SATA ports so when I rebooted my system all it said was Grub with a flashing cursor and just sat there.
Well I am no expert when it comes to Grub but out of necessity I have learned some about it so after I looked at how Grub was mapping the drives using the Super Grub Disk I was successful in manually editing the grub.conf and menu.lst file with the root mapping that grub was showing my drives, (still not sure if I need to edit the grub.conf file but seems to work ok when I have.) So far the only distro that I could not figure out how to edit the menu.lst file was Ubuntu, the ones I have tried so far have been, Mepis, Fedora, Suse, Ubuntu, Dream Linux and Saybon. I am giving you all this information about my experience with Grub for your general info that you may want to pass along as a bug. I do not know if this classifies as a bug but if it does I do not know how to submit a correct bug report.
The only thing I have having problems with at the moment that is a deal breaker is the NTFS access, once I get this resolved I will move on to seeing if I can get my wacom drawing table working as well as my web cam.
Thanks for your help