![]() ![]() If escape works and you can catch grub, press "e" when it appears and add a "3" (without quotes) to the kernel line so we can boot up into init 3, which will leave you at a terminal screen with a prompt. Since we are going back and forth on the forum, I'll try and tell you some things in advance, in case we don't catch each other here at the same time. ![]() ![]() If you hit it at the right spot, we can work on it from there. Experiment by hitting escape occasionally while it is booting up and see if you can catch grub. Thanks mfillpot, it really does belong in Fedora, as I said before, sets the timer on grub to zero, so, it's hard to catch. But if you can stop the boot at grub, it might be easier because we can just boot into init 3 (by adding 3 to the kernel line) and work from there.Ī default Fedora install sets grub to a timeout of zero so that's why I'm asking if you can see it while booting up. We can also use the live cd to do the repair. If this is what you want to do, let me know if you see the grub screen when you are booting up, so we can stop the boot from going into gnome and go directly into terminal. Since I made the same mistake, I can help you fix it. If it is a new installation, just do a reinstall. What you will have to do to clean up the installation is remove the kernel that came in with the kmod-nvidia driver and reset everything using the old kernel. For your install you probably would have had to load up kmod-nvidia-PAE. So when I installed kmod-nvidia it also pulled in a regular kernel. The default installation loaded a PAE kernel instead of the regular kernel. OK, well, when I first used Fedora I made the same mistake. ![]()
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