i found an even better solution...

credit goes to:

http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Install_Windows_after_Gentoo#Installing_Windows

(gentoo really shines in the support department)

turns out that although windows will not create a new partition at the
end of the disk, it has no problem installing to an existing partition
at the end of the disk.  i went in with my live cd, created the
partition, and then asked ntldr or w/e to install windows there and it
worked just fine.

thanks for the helpful comments :)

On 5/5/06, Leigh Stewart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ok so i cant move swap into the 10Gbs i set aside for microstink at
the end of the disk, so to move my root linux partition forward,
should I be able to tar the entire filesystem from a livecd for
example, then delete and recreate the partitions as needed, then untar
the tarred filesystem into the new relocated partition?  im concerned
that some data, configuration etc may depend on or expect to be locate
at a certain physical location on disk...

On 5/4/06, Peter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 04 May 2006 16:58:13 -0400, Leigh Stewart wrote:
>
> > I recently decided to resize my reiserfs root partition, used
> > resize_reiserfs to shrink the filesystem, then used cfdisk to resize the
> > device.  Everything went according to plan, although it was a somewhat
> > unnerving experience because in order to resize using cfdisk u have to
> > delete then recreate the partition, which wasn't clearly documented
> > anywhere... Anyway, now Ive got a problem because my disk at the moment
> > has 3 primary partitions, 1 boot part., 1 swap part, and one root part.
> > for gentoo.
> >
> > the problem is i cant create a new primary partition which i need to do
> > if i want to install windows beside gentoo, which i also need to do.
> >
> You can have 4 primary partitions. That is not a problem. Unless the last
> partition begins after the 1024 cylinder boundary. In which case M$ will
> not be happy.
>
> > does anyone know if it would be possible to replace my boot and swap
> > partitions with identically sized logical partitions inside a single
> > primary partition? has anyone attempted this? it occurs to me that that
> > would be the simplest solution...
> >
> Setting up an extended partition scheme would work fine. However, using
> cfdisk, you cannot make the conversion without losing data. Because of
> reiser, even a program like Partition Magic (the best for this sort of
> manipulation) can't work.
>
> Given your current setup, here's what I would do. Move swap to the last
> partition, Linux to 3, M$ to 2, and leave boot. If you use grub, you can
> program it to boot M$ easily.
>
> > anyone have any other ideas?
> >
> > Yes. Backup. Then Backup. Then Backup again!
> --
> Peter
>
>
> --
> gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
>
>


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