i'm afraid the 'new' NTFS is rather a p.i.t.a regarding compatibility, it
has far more attributes and is 'from what i've gathered' very hard to hack
into. Even Writing a read-only driver might be very, very hard. Since it is
internally very different from NT NTFS reading the WIN2K NTFS will 'to my
recollection' not be possible with any standard stuff you get with Linux
distro's.

-----Original Message-----
From: Kent West [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 05, 2001 3:45 PM
To: Subramaniam Aiyer (CTS)
Cc: Debian (E-mail)
Subject: Re: debain on windows 2k


Subramaniam Aiyer (CTS) wrote:

> hi,
>      i am trying to install debian linux on my office computer which has
> only one hard disk i.e no partitions
> can i go ahead with the insatllation or should i downgrade to windowsNT.
>      one of my friend who was installing red hat had to first downgrade to
> NT. Also, the sysadmin gave some reason of file systems. can anybody
please
> explain further?
>                                                     thanx,
>                                                       INDSpeedFreak   

You'll need to repartition your disk so that you have one for W2K (or 
NT, your choice, it doesn't matter), and at least two for Linux (/ and 
swap space). There are valid reasons for having more than two partitions 
for Linux, but for now, to keep things simple, two should be adequate.

NT uses either FAT16 or NTFS as a disk format; W2K uses either FAT32 or 
NTFS. Another kink is that somewhere around Service Pack 4, NTFS 
changed, so that a drive formatted NTFS prior to SP4 is different than 
an NTFS on NT, SP4+ and W2K.

Linux can read and write to FAT16 and FAT32, but can only read (at least 
with the standard stuff) NTFS. I'm not sure what relevance the new NTFS 
format has. It may be that your sysadmin knows that the new NTFS isn't 
compatible with Linux, but I suspect that Linux can handle both the new 
and the old NTFS formats (but don't quote me on that).

If your current W2K is on FAT32, you can use the free fips tool to 
repartition it. You'll have to defrag the W2K system and maybe delete 
file and temporarily turn off the virtual memory, etc, in order to get 
all the W2K stuff to the front of the disk before fips can help you, 
because it looks for empty space at the end of the drive in which to 
create the new partition. fips is scary to use the first time around, 
but if you're technically minded, you can muddle through. Still, you 
should always back up your system before playing with major stuff like 
partitioning.

If you have NTFS on your W2K system, you'll either have to use a 
commercial tool like Partition Magic, or you'll have to backup your 
system, wipe the drive and repartition, and then restore your system (a 
major pain).

Other than the slim possibility mentioned above, and that would only 
apply if you're trying to read files from the W2K side while in Linux, I 
don't know of any reason why you'd need to downgrade from W2K to NT. In 
fact, just last week I put Debian on a W2K laptop. It was FAT32 
formatted, so I used fips to free up about 1.5GB on the tail end of the 
drive, and then installed Debian on that free space. Dual-booting works 
great on it; it's not my laptop, so I don't have it in front of me to 
play with, and I don't think I tested to see if I could read the W2K 
partition from Linux, but I'm 99.2% sure that it would work.

Hope this helps,

Kent


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