On Sat, 26 Jan 2008 13:55:26 +0000 "Alphons \"Fonz\" van Werven" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi, > > I have a recent model Toshiba laptop here, dual-booting Windows Vista and > Slackware Linux (not my call, so no flames please). When I got the > go-ahead to replace Linux with FreeBSD 6.3-RELEASE, the following > happened: > > The partitioner complained that the found geometry 232581/16/63 is invalid > and it's using a more likely geometry instead. Closer inspection reveals > that this "more likely" geom (14593/255/63) is actually the real geometry, > so question 1 is: where did FreeBSD get this other weird-ass geometry > from? > > When installing the boot manager, it hosed Windows' bootability. I could > mount and access the Windows partition from within FreeBSD just fine so > the partition itself seemed to be okay, but it just wouldn't boot. When I > selected it in the bootmanager menu, it showed a screen saying Windows > can't boot and I should use the recovery disk to repair Windows. Since > everything on the machine that was even remotely important had just been > backed up and Windows was due for a reinstall anyway, I just reinstalled > it and no harm was done, but I still wonder what happened. How come > FreeBSD's boot manager stopped Windows from booting? > > The reinstall of Windows wiped away everything else, so I can retry > installing FreeBSD. But given the troubles described above, what's the > best way to do it? Currently, I'm considering the following: > 1. Boot this Live Linux CD I have lying around here and which finds the > correct geometry for the disk right away. > 2. Make a backup of the MBR. > 3. Create a partition (slice) for FreeBSD. > 4. Boot the FreeBSD install disk and run through sysinstall (partitioning > the slice Linux just created) but don't let it install a boot loader. > 5. Boot the Live Linux again and install LILO from there. > But if you have any other suggestions I'm all ears of course. > > Oh, and a final question: the Windows installer creates a partition table > in which partitions (slices) don't end on cylinder/track boundaries. Is > this a big deal? Linux notices it but doesn't seem bothered much by it and > FreeBSD appears to act likewise. But I thought I'd better ask, just to be > sure. > > Thanks in advance, > > Alphons > This article might help: http://www.clearchain.com/wiki/FreeBSD_%26_Windows_Vista -- Regards, Ghirai. _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"