Bob,
  if you accepted the default partition scheme on the LV, then you can mount your /root while in dom0 and create a grub 0.97 type menu.lst
  #mount /dev/VolGroup0/VM1 /mnt -o offset=1048576
  nano /mnt/boot/grub/menu.lst
  (now copy in the text below) then unmount /mnt and test again with pygrub
  #pygrub -q /dev/VolGroup0/VM1
  ------------------ /boot/grub/menu.lst ---------- default 0 timeout 5 title           Ubuntu 10.04 LTS, kernel 2.6.32-24-generic root            (hd0,1) kernel          /vmlinuz root=/dev/xvda1 ro console=tty0 console=ttyS0,38400n8 console=hvc0 initrd          /boot/initrd.img
  - - - - - - - - - -  snip - - - - - - - - --  Mark --- On Wed, 9/1/10, Bob Sauvage <Bob.sauvage@xxxxxx> wrote:
  From: Bob Sauvage <Bob.sauvage@xxxxxx> Subject: [Xen-users] Installing Ubuntu 10.04 on Xen and Centos 5.5 To: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Date: Wednesday, September 1, 2010, 7:20 AM
 
 ïHello people ! 
 
 I'm trying to install Ubuntu on a Xen server under Centos 5.5. 
 
 Here my
 /etc/xen/ubuntu.cfg :  
 
 name      = "ubuntu" memory    = 512 disk      = ['phy:/dev/VolGroup0/VM1,xvda,w' ] vif       = [ 'bridge=xenbr0' ] kernel    = "/home/test/vmlinuz" ramdisk   = "/home/test/initrd.gz"
  vcpus     = 1 
 
 The installation procedure goes fine. At the end, a reboot occurs but the domU doesn't restart.  What do I modify on my ubuntu.cfg file ? I'm a newbie with Xen, I suppose that I must modify the kernel and ramdisk option.  
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