BIOS points to first block of the disk. First block of the disk (MBR) points at secondary boot loader (grub or LILO or syslinux... whatever). That will point at the device that you mount as boot as its initial root. What you see as root in your running system is loaded after that and you then mount in /boot what was initially the root during the bootstrap process. Oh, your numbers on the end. Use 1 2 for boot. The fs passno (the last number) for root should be 1, and for normal filesystems should be 2. 0 (or blank) means don't check as part of the fstab stuffs. sorry for the ramblingness On Tue, Sep 2, 2014 at 8:05 PM, Michael Havens wrote: > I am assuming that everything is cool with LFS up to this point and am > thinking that I am going to create a boot partition. I do have 1 or 2 > questions about this though before we proceed. First: > > does every Linux distro search for the boot partition first? > > then > > when modifying fstab what do I put into it for the options? Here is the > current lfs fstab > > /dev/sda6 / ext4 defaults 1 1 > /dev/sda7 swap swap pri=1 0 0 > proc /proc proc nosuid,noexec,nodev 0 0 > sysfs /sys sysfs nosuid,noexec,nodev 0 0 > devpts /dev/pts devpts gid=5,mode=620 0 0 > tmpfs /run tmpfs defaults 0 0 > devtmpfs /dev devtmpfs mode=0755,nosuid 0 0 > > my only guess would be: > > /boot ext4 defaults 1 1 > > :-)~MIKE~(-: > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > -- James McPhee jmcphe@gmail.com