At 16:36 24/06/2011, d...@safeport.com wrote:
Well for me it all worked well for all versions of FreeBSD until
Windows 7. My main purpose was to document the link given to me by a
friend who does user support for a local college. Before Vista the
boot process was pretty simple, the MBR was one sector on sector 0,
track 0 and it read the first sector of the target partition who
took it from there.
My experience with FreeBSD 7.0 to present has been that the install
does not work with Windows 7. It appears that the MBR can still only
have 4 entries. Windows 7 gets more by using extended partitions.
Dell, the there can be only one and let it be Windows company, uses
two small partitions for something. It may be that some of that
underlying stuff is not needed but I had enough trouble without
without making changes at that level.
In Vista the way that Windows start changed. The MBR points to a file
inside the Windows partition that have the partition scheme. It's
called BCD. You can install EasyBCD in windows (it's freeware with
commercial licence) that permits you to start Windows and other OS
inside other partitions. I use it in my trial?
Win7/FreeBSD8.2/OpenBSD4.9 server and dual Win7/FreeBSD8.2 laptop.
http://neosmart.net/dl.php?id=1
If FreeBSD can be installed in an extended partition, that would be
a very useful howto.
Don't know about it, perhaps using easybcd you can do that
HTH
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