Description of problem: When trying to boot the F7 Test 2 Live CD, I am getting some ATA errors on my test machine. After that the boot process stops with the error "Cannot find root file system!" How reproducible: Always. Steps to Reproduce: 1. Boot the F7 Test 2 Live CD Actual results: Some ATA errors are shown. After that, the boot process stops with an error message. Expected results: The Live CD is completely booting without errors. Additional info: See Bug 227734 for the history of this bug and for further information. This bug is quite similar, but it was not fixed with F7 Test 2. Also see these screenshots: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=149292 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=150530 The target machine: http://smolt.fedoraproject.org/show?UUID=db8555c4-4b6b-4a6f-a7ea-79aeb1278dc6
Based on the date this bug was created, it appears to have been reported against rawhide during the development of a Fedora release that is no longer maintained. In order to refocus our efforts as a project we are flagging all of the open bugs for releases which are no longer maintained. If this bug remains in NEEDINFO thirty (30) days from now, we will automatically close it. If you can reproduce this bug in a maintained Fedora version (7, 8, or rawhide), please change this bug to the respective version and change the status to ASSIGNED. (If you're unable to change the bug's version or status, add a comment to the bug and someone will change it for you.) Thanks for your help, and we apologize again that we haven't handled these issues to this point. The process we're following is outlined here: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/BugZappers/F9CleanUp We will be following the process here: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/BugZappers/HouseKeeping to ensure this doesn't happen again.
This bug has been in NEEDINFO for more than 30 days since feedback was first requested. As a result we are closing it. If you can reproduce this bug in the future against a maintained Fedora version please feel free to reopen it against that version. The process we're following is outlined here: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/BugZappers/F9CleanUp