Found a way around it. This crazy board has two SATA RAID controllers and Ubuntu liked the Intel one much better. Booting just straight IDE off the Promise controller and doing RAID-1 off the Intel controller. Seems to be working well. On 8/7/07, Donovan Niesen <dniesen at gmail.com> wrote: > > Maybe this is just my crappy SATA controllers then because I tried to just > change the Promise controller to IDE and I'm getting the same errors. Only > seems to boot when that controller is not enabled. > > It's still reading that drive because it attempts to boot from it. Would > the order the BIOS sees the drives in matter? I'm thinking that maybe by > tossing the other controller in the mix now my 120GB drive is SDD instead of > SDA? > > > On 8/7/07, Chad Walstrom <chewie at wookimus.net> wrote: > > > > I never use Promise "RAID" controllers. Either use a true hardware RAID > > controller, or use software RAID. The on-board "RAID" controllers on > > most PC's are not true hardware RAID, and are therefore useless. > > > > > > -- > Donovan Niesen -- Donovan Niesen -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mailman.mn-linux.org/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20070807/a10caf93/attachment.htm