Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-28 Thread David Van Mosselbeen
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 12:00:03 +0200, Sjoerd Hiemstra wrote:

> On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 10:35:44 +0300 Andrei Popescu wrote:
>> AFAICT there is currently no way to tell update-grub that some (or even
>> all) of the partitions found by os-prober are not needed in the menu.
> 
> Well, at least you could edit /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober. Line 35 reads:
> 
>  OSPROBED="`os-prober | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d ' '`"
> 
> Run os-prober and determine which lines of its output you want to
> include or exclude.
> Examples:
> only include the line that contains sda3:
> 
>  OSPROBED="`os-prober | grep sda3 | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d ' '`"
> 
> exclude the line that contains sdb4:
> 
>  OSPROBED="`os-prober | grep --invert-match sdb4 | tr ' ' '^' |
>  paste -s -d ' '`"

(First message seems to be queued forever in cyberspace, sorry if you 
will see this twice)

This works perfectly man! Thanks!

The first "Vista" partition (sda2) seems to be a weird windows ntfs 
stuff. When i boot it i get a weird windows error screen. Never saw 
somethings like that. Maybe related to the black magic of the recovery 
stuff.

The second "vista" partition (sda4) is the recovery stuff of Compaq. When 
i boot it i get the Recovery interface to backup/restore the system.

Now need to find a way to fix: FATAL ERROR: Bad primary partition 3: 
Partition ends in the final partial cylinder

Honesty, i worry more about that error, as i dunno the consequence this 
could have.

Kind regards,
David Van Mosselbeen


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-28 Thread David Van Mosselbeen
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 12:00:03 +0200, Sjoerd Hiemstra wrote:

> On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 10:35:44 +0300 Andrei Popescu wrote:
>> AFAICT there is currently no way to tell update-grub that some (or even
>> all) of the partitions found by os-prober are not needed in the menu.
> 
> Well, at least you could edit /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober. Line 35 reads:
> 
>  OSPROBED="`os-prober | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d ' '`"
> 
> Run os-prober and determine which lines of its output you want to
> include or exclude.
> Examples:
> only include the line that contains sda3:
> 
>  OSPROBED="`os-prober | grep sda3 | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d ' '`"
> 
> exclude the line that contains sdb4:
> 
>  OSPROBED="`os-prober | grep --invert-match sdb4 | tr ' ' '^' |
>  paste -s -d ' '`"

Woks perfectly so :) Thanks man!

Indeed, the first "Vista" partition is some weird "Windows" ntfs thingy, 
when i try to boot it i get a white on black windows error message. Never 
saw somethings like that. Probably related to the black magic of the 
recovery stuff.

The second "Vista" partition is the recovery stuff, when i boot on it, i 
get the Compaq interface to restore or backup the system.

Now need to find a way to fix that "Bad primary partition 2" :)

Kind regards,
David Van Mosselbeen


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-26 Thread Sjoerd Hiemstra
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010 10:35:44 +0300 Andrei Popescu wrote:
> AFAICT there is currently no way to tell update-grub that some (or
> even all) of the partitions found by os-prober are not needed in the
> menu.

Well, at least you could edit /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober.
Line 35 reads:

 OSPROBED="`os-prober | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d ' '`"

Run os-prober and determine which lines of its output you want to
include or exclude.
Examples:
only include the line that contains sda3:

 OSPROBED="`os-prober | grep sda3 | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d ' '`"

exclude the line that contains sdb4:

 OSPROBED="`os-prober | grep --invert-match sdb4 | tr ' ' '^' | paste -s -d 
' '`"


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-26 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Ma, 26 oct 10, 00:57:45, Charles Kroeger wrote:
> On Sat, 23 Oct 2010 15:20:01 +0200
> David Van Mosselbeen  wrote:
> 
> > 3 Windows operating systems
> > (1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run
> > update-grub to get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with
> > showing 3 windows operating systems in the bootloader, but that's
> > another issue :)
> 
> I had a similar issue to this one and solved it by editing the file:
> 
> /boot/grub/grub.cfg
> 
> The one that begins: DO NOT EDIT THIS FILEin it you will see
> all those unwanted lists of things you don't want and don't have.

And they will be back on the next update-grub.

AFAICT there is currently no way to tell update-grub that some (or even 
all) of the partitions found by os-prober are not needed in the menu.

Regards,
Andrei
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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-25 Thread Tom H
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 12:57 AM, Charles Kroeger
 wrote:
> On Sat, 23 Oct 2010 15:20:01 +0200
> David Van Mosselbeen  wrote:
>
>> 3 Windows operating systems
>> (1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run
>> update-grub to get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with
>> showing 3 windows operating systems in the bootloader, but that's
>> another issue :)
>
> I had a similar issue to this one and solved it by editing the file:
>
> /boot/grub/grub.cfg

The Vista partitions must be your "hidden" recovery partitions. You've
hit one of the PITAs of grub2; there's no way of making update-grub
skip them without editing the "/etc/grub.d" scripts (or edit
"/etc/grub/grub.cfg" as you did).


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-25 Thread Doug

On 10/26/2010 12:57 AM, Charles Kroeger wrote:

On Sat, 23 Oct 2010 15:20:01 +0200
David Van Mosselbeen  wrote:


3 Windows operating systems
(1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run
update-grub to get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with
showing 3 windows operating systems in the bootloader, but that's
another issue :)


I had a similar issue to this one and solved it by editing the file:

/boot/grub/grub.cfg

The one that begins: DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE  in it you will see
all those unwanted lists of things you don't want and don't have.


In PCLINUXOS, there is a menu item More Applications>Configuration>
Redo MBR.  This is also available in the live version, you don't have
to install anything.  You need to know what partitions your various
systems are installed on, and then, from this setup, you can edit out
the repeating or erroneous ones and then do "reset MBR."  This is a nice 
graphical grub, btw, and allows enough time to read it before selecting 
what you want to boot. I wasn't smart enough to figure

out the other version mentioned above, so I worked around the problem,
successfully.  (I wouldn't be at all surprised to find that the
file I edited is similar to the file Charlie Kroger refers to.)

--doug

--
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 --A.M. Greeley



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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-25 Thread Charles Kroeger
On Sat, 23 Oct 2010 15:20:01 +0200
David Van Mosselbeen  wrote:

> 3 Windows operating systems
> (1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run
> update-grub to get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with
> showing 3 windows operating systems in the bootloader, but that's
> another issue :)

I had a similar issue to this one and solved it by editing the file:

/boot/grub/grub.cfg

The one that begins: DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE  in it you will see
all those unwanted lists of things you don't want and don't have.

-- 
C.


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-24 Thread David Van Mosselbeen

On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 02:43:06 -0700, consul tores 
wrote:
> 2010/10/23 consul tores :
>> 2010/10/23 David Van Mosselbeen :
>>
>>> Hi,
>>> Kinda late to reply on this, but yah...
>>>
>>> My wife own a Compaq laptop with Windows 7 preinstalled. A few days
ago
>>> i
>>> have installed Debian testing (the daily netinst cd) on it. I have
>>> resized
>>> the windows NTFS partition with the debian installer. Just select that
>>> option to manualy manage the partition when you are on the partitions
>>> screen. Then i created the needed linux partitions. Then installed the
>>> base
>>> install and installed all my lovely toys.
>>>
>>> All was ok, just got a little bonus issue, nothing to do with the
>>> partitioning (i think). Grub not showing the windows 7 entry in the
>>> bootloader menu. os-prober was been detecting 3 Windows operating
>>> systems
>>> (1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run
update-grub
>>> to
>>> get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with showing 3
windows
>>> operating systems in the bootloader, but that's another issue :) Maybe
>>> the
>>> black magic of the Compaq recovery utility for Windows. I still need
to
>>> check.
>>>
>>> Anyway, i recommend you make a good backup before doing irreversible
>>> things.
>>>
>>> Bah, i guess your install is already done a few days ago :) But so you
>>> know about this one which i find kinda nice and easy to do.
>>>
>>> Have a nice day all,
>>> David,
>>
>> Hello David
>>
>> Just by curiosity! Have you tested your HD using cfdisk, fdisk or
sfdisk?
>> could you please show the output?
> 
> Ooops, i send it privately; David, could you please show the output of
> fdisk and sfdisk?
> 
> -- 
>            Consultores Agropecuarios.
> Administracion, Produccion, Capacitacion.

Hi Tores,

It's good that you talk about it. Seems that there's a little issue with
the partitions.

cfdisk complains with: FATAL ERROR: Bad primary partition 2: Partition
ends in the final partial cylinder Press any key to exit cfdisk

And here's output of fdisk:

# fdisk -l /dev/sda

Disk /dev/sda: 500.1 GB, 500107862016 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 60801 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk identifier: 0x1d0caa27

   Device Boot  Start End  Blocks   Id  System
/dev/sda1   1  26  2037767  HPFS/NTFS
Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary.
/dev/sda2  26   48657   3906250007  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda3   59018   60802143298567  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda4   48657   59018832256015  Extended
/dev/sda5   48657   49629 7812096   82  Linux swap /
Solaris
/dev/sda6   *   49629   5901875412480   83  Linux

Partition table entries are not in disk order

And even sfdisk complains:

# sfdisk -l /dev/sda

Disk /dev/sda: 60801 cylinders, 255 heads, 63 sectors/track
Warning: extended partition does not start at a cylinder boundary.
DOS and Linux will interpret the contents differently.
Units = cylinders of 8225280 bytes, blocks of 1024 bytes, counting from 0

   Device Boot Start End   #cyls#blocks   Id  System
/dev/sda1  0+ 25- 26-2037767  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda2 25+  48656-  48631- 3906250007  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda3  59017+  60801-   1784-  143298567  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda4  48656+  59017-  10362-  832256015  Extended
/dev/sda5  48656+  49628-973-   7812096   82  Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sda6   *  49628+  59017-   9389-  75412480   83  Linux

I wonder if this issue happen due the installer or the black magic that is
behind that Compaq recovery tool and partition. Or even if that's why
os-prober react so and the need to run update-grub manually. I should
stratch my head. I don't know concequences this could have, nor how to fix
it yet. Need to check.

I can't reproduce it in vmware-server right now. There's and issue to
install it on Squeeze, i need to investigate that also.

Kind regards,
David


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-24 Thread consul tores
2010/10/23 consul tores :
> 2010/10/23 David Van Mosselbeen :
>
>> Hi,
>> Kinda late to reply on this, but yah...
>>
>> My wife own a Compaq laptop with Windows 7 preinstalled. A few days ago i
>> have installed Debian testing (the daily netinst cd) on it. I have resized
>> the windows NTFS partition with the debian installer. Just select that
>> option to manualy manage the partition when you are on the partitions
>> screen. Then i created the needed linux partitions. Then installed the base
>> install and installed all my lovely toys.
>>
>> All was ok, just got a little bonus issue, nothing to do with the
>> partitioning (i think). Grub not showing the windows 7 entry in the
>> bootloader menu. os-prober was been detecting 3 Windows operating systems
>> (1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run update-grub to
>> get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with showing 3 windows
>> operating systems in the bootloader, but that's another issue :) Maybe the
>> black magic of the Compaq recovery utility for Windows. I still need to
>> check.
>>
>> Anyway, i recommend you make a good backup before doing irreversible
>> things.
>>
>> Bah, i guess your install is already done a few days ago :) But so you
>> know about this one which i find kinda nice and easy to do.
>>
>> Have a nice day all,
>> David,
>
> Hello David
>
> Just by curiosity! Have you tested your HD using cfdisk, fdisk or sfdisk?
> could you please show the output?

Ooops, i send it privately; David, could you please show the output of
fdisk and sfdisk?

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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-23 Thread David Van Mosselbeen

On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 21:54:57 +0200, Ogya Chief 
wrote:
> Hi All,
> 
>  
> 
> I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to
> partition and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian
installer's
> partitioner, what precautions do I have to take in order not to damage
the
> Windows partition?
> 
>  
> 
> Kind regards,
> 
> Ogya

Hi,
Kinda late to reply on this, but yah...

My wife own a Compaq laptop with Windows 7 preinstalled. A few days ago i
have installed Debian testing (the daily netinst cd) on it. I have resized
the windows NTFS partition with the debian installer. Just select that
option to manualy manage the partition when you are on the partitions
screen. Then i created the needed linux partitions. Then installed the base
install and installed all my lovely toys.

All was ok, just got a little bonus issue, nothing to do with the
partitioning (i think). Grub not showing the windows 7 entry in the
bootloader menu. os-prober was been detecting 3 Windows operating systems
(1 win7 and 2 of Vista which i don't have). Had need to run update-grub to
get this issue fixed. Well, i still have an issue with showing 3 windows
operating systems in the bootloader, but that's another issue :) Maybe the
black magic of the Compaq recovery utility for Windows. I still need to
check.

Anyway, i recommend you make a good backup before doing irreversible
things.

Bah, i guess your install is already done a few days ago :) But so you
know about this one which i find kinda nice and easy to do.

Have a nice day all,
David,


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-14 Thread Mark
On Thu, Oct 14, 2010 at 6:53 AM, Gilbert Sullivan wrote:

>  A very good point. I was going to mention that the restore discs provided
> by some vendors (via this method of creating them using a utility provided
> by the vendor) will let you perform a clean OS installation which omits some
> or all of the "extraneous" or third party software that comes with the
> factory image. That's a very nice feature since, otherwise, I'll just be
> buying another license and doing a clean installation without the cr*pola
> added by the OEM anyway.
>
> It also lets any subsequent owner of the system get a nice, clean Windows
> image (well, as nice and clean as they get) on the system.
>
> I don't use Windows on any personal systems these days, but it was surely
> nice to have the option of an installation without all of the weird stuff
> added by the computer maker because of all of those sweetheart deals with
> their business partners.


The last laptop I bought for a friend was a Toshiba some 5 years ago.  Their
recovery partition/backup utility included virtually all of the crapware -
even the trial version of Office 2003 - maybe things are different now.  I
suppose YMMV depending on vendor, etc., but for the OP I would definitely do
a full disk image with Clonezilla regardless of what choice he makes with
the built-in recovery options.  Then all he needs to do is change user name
possibly before selling if he restores from backup Clonezilla image, if that
day comes.

Just my $0.02, especially since the last Windows 7 disk image I made with
Clonezilla took 15 minutes, it seems like a good idea regardless if you ever
use it or not.


Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-14 Thread Gilbert Sullivan

On 10/14/2010 09:35 AM, Preston Boyington wrote:

Mark wrote:


None of this matters if you use Clonezilla. So why even fiddle with it
when there's a great alternative?



I use Clonezilla a great deal, but most people don't think to make an
image of the machine before they start Windows for the first time.

What I'm talking about is having the ability to restore the machine to a
factory state, with no personalization, in the event of your selling or
passing it along to someone else. Doing this allows the new user to walk
through the setup routine that is presented and personalize it to their
taste.

A very good point. I was going to mention that the restore discs 
provided by some vendors (via this method of creating them using a 
utility provided by the vendor) will let you perform a clean OS 
installation which omits some or all of the "extraneous" or third party 
software that comes with the factory image. That's a very nice feature 
since, otherwise, I'll just be buying another license and doing a clean 
installation without the cr*pola added by the OEM anyway.


It also lets any subsequent owner of the system get a nice, clean 
Windows image (well, as nice and clean as they get) on the system.


I don't use Windows on any personal systems these days, but it was 
surely nice to have the option of an installation without all of the 
weird stuff added by the computer maker because of all of those 
sweetheart deals with their business partners.



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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-14 Thread Preston Boyington

Mark wrote:

None of this matters if you use Clonezilla.  So why even fiddle with it 
when there's a great alternative?




I use Clonezilla a great deal, but most people don't think to make an 
image of the machine before they start Windows for the first time.


What I'm talking about is having the ability to restore the machine to a 
factory state, with no personalization, in the event of your selling or 
passing it along to someone else.  Doing this allows the new user to 
walk through the setup routine that is presented and personalize it to 
their taste.


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Γιώργος Πάλλας
On 14/10/2010 08:54 πμ, Tom H wrote:
> 2010/10/14 Γιώργος Πάλλας :
>   
>> On 14/10/2010 04:43 πμ, Tom H wrote:
>> 
>>>
>>> You can mess with the registry to make another set of recovery disks
>>> if the first set is damaged or unduplicated
>>>   
>> This is really unneeded. What I do on friend's laptops with
>> pre-installed Win7 and no recovery disks (just a recovery partition) who
>> want to install ubuntu or some other linux distro is this: I boot
>> Clonezilla, I open a shell, I delete the recovery partition (using
>> fdisk/cfdisk) and then I take a good compressed disk snapshot on an
>> external usb disk. Then, install debian/ubuntu on the 10Gigs of the
>> recovered space of the ex-recovery partition.
>> 
> And when you sell the box to a Windows-only user, ..

... you also sell him support for when the bad time comes :-P




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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Tom H
2010/10/14 Γιώργος Πάλλας :
> On 14/10/2010 04:43 πμ, Tom H wrote:
>> On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:11 PM, Mark Allums  wrote:
>>> On 10/13/2010 6:43 PM, Tom H wrote:
 On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Preston Boyington
   wrote:
> Ogya Chief wrote:
>
>> At this stage there is no data to backup. If there is any other thing I
>> can backup, please let me know.
>>
> Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would
> suggest
> burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" partition to a
> DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard drive goes belly up
> later you can slap a new one in and put the machine back to a factory
> state
> if you wish.
>
 Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
 restore partition?!

>>> Often, they do, yes.  Typically, it allows exactly one copy to be created,
>>> so, ensure that good media is used, and follow instructions to the letter.
>>>  Once that copy is attempted, no more are allowed.
>>>
>> You can mess with the registry to make another set of recovery disks
>> if the first set is damaged or unduplicated
>
> This is really unneeded. What I do on friend's laptops with
> pre-installed Win7 and no recovery disks (just a recovery partition) who
> want to install ubuntu or some other linux distro is this: I boot
> Clonezilla, I open a shell, I delete the recovery partition (using
> fdisk/cfdisk) and then I take a good compressed disk snapshot on an
> external usb disk. Then, install debian/ubuntu on the 10Gigs of the
> recovered space of the ex-recovery partition.

And when you sell the box to a Windows-only user, ...


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Γιώργος Πάλλας
On 14/10/2010 04:43 πμ, Tom H wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:11 PM, Mark Allums  wrote:
>   
>> On 10/13/2010 6:43 PM, Tom H wrote:
>> 
>>> On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Preston Boyington
>>>   wrote:
>>>   
 Ogya Chief wrote:
 
> At this stage there is no data to backup. If there is any other thing I
> can backup, please let me know.
>   
 Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would
 suggest
 burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" partition to a
 DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard drive goes belly up
 later you can slap a new one in and put the machine back to a factory
 state
 if you wish.
 
>>> Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
>>> restore partition?!
>>>   
>> Often, they do, yes.  Typically, it allows exactly one copy to be created,
>> so, ensure that good media is used, and follow instructions to the letter.
>>  Once that copy is attempted, no more are allowed.
>> 
> You can mess with the registry to make another set of recovery disks
> if the first set is damaged or unduplicated

This is really unneeded. What I do on friend's laptops with
pre-installed Win7 and no recovery disks (just a recovery partition) who
want to install ubuntu or some other linux distro is this: I boot
Clonezilla, I open a shell, I delete the recovery partition (using
fdisk/cfdisk) and then I take a good compressed disk snapshot on an
external usb disk. Then, install debian/ubuntu on the 10Gigs of the
recovered space of the ex-recovery partition.




smime.p7s
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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Tom H
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 10:53 PM, Mark Allums  wrote:
> On 10/13/2010 8:45 PM, consul tores wrote:
>
>> And, yes, it is possible to create windows 7 recovery DVDs, many times
>> as you wanted.
>
> This isn't universally true. Maybe some manufacturers enforce it and some
> don't. HP does, or has, restricted it to one copy. I never understood why
> making multiple recovery discs was not allowed, it seemed like a waste of
> time. Most people can find a way to copy them, if they want to. I just
> warned about the restriction for people to take note of. It might be an
> inconvenience to look out for, is all.

I've made more than one copy on an HP (the first attempt failed 3/4 of
the way through). There was one registry change to make in order to be
allowed to make a second copy. If I still had an HP, I'd track the key
down for you. It's probably googlable.


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark Allums

On 10/13/2010 8:45 PM, consul tores wrote:


And, yes, it is possible to create windows 7 recovery DVDs, many times
as you wanted.


This isn't universally true.  Maybe some manufacturers enforce it and 
some don't.  HP does, or has, restricted it to one copy.  I never 
understood why making multiple recovery discs was not allowed, it seemed 
like a waste of time.  Most people can find a way to copy them, if they 
want to.  I just warned about the restriction for people to take note 
of.  It might be an inconvenience to look out for, is all.


It certainly makes one appreciate Debian all the more.


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark Allums

On 10/13/2010 8:31 PM, Mark wrote:

On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 6:11 PM, Mark Allums 
Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
restore partition?!


Often, they do, yes.  Typically, it allows exactly one copy to be
created, so, ensure that good media is used, and follow instructions
to the letter.  Once that copy is attempted, no more are allowed.

None of this matters if you use Clonezilla.  So why even fiddle with it
when there's a great alternative?


Oh, it's a matter of caution.  Perhaps you feel it's overcautious. 
Whatever.




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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread consul tores
2010/10/12 Ogya Chief :
> Hi All,
>
> I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to partition
> and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian installer's
> partitioner, what precautions do I have to take in order not to damage the
> Windows partition?
>
> Kind regards,
> Ogya

You should investigate how windows 7 did partitions, because it has a
 different partitioner; you can finish with all partitions ending at the
 middle of cylinders; Debian should be installed, but in short time
 both OSs could become unstable. .

And, yes, it is possible to create windows 7 recovery DVDs, many times
as you wanted.

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Administracion, Produccion, Capacitacion.


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Tom H
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:11 PM, Mark Allums  wrote:
> On 10/13/2010 6:43 PM, Tom H wrote:
>> On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Preston Boyington
>>   wrote:
>>> Ogya Chief wrote:

 At this stage there is no data to backup. If there is any other thing I
 can backup, please let me know.
>>>
>>> Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would
>>> suggest
>>> burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" partition to a
>>> DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard drive goes belly up
>>> later you can slap a new one in and put the machine back to a factory
>>> state
>>> if you wish.
>>
>> Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
>> restore partition?!
>
> Often, they do, yes.  Typically, it allows exactly one copy to be created,
> so, ensure that good media is used, and follow instructions to the letter.
>  Once that copy is attempted, no more are allowed.

You can mess with the registry to make another set of recovery disks
if the first set is damaged or unduplicated.


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 6:11 PM, Mark Allums  wrote:

> On 10/13/2010 6:43 PM, Tom H wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Preston Boyington
>>   wrote:
>>
>>> Ogya Chief wrote:
>>>

 At this stage there is no data to backup. If there is any other thing I
 can backup, please let me know.

>>>
>>> Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would
>>> suggest
>>> burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" partition to a
>>> DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard drive goes belly up
>>> later you can slap a new one in and put the machine back to a factory
>>> state
>>> if you wish.
>>>
>>
>> Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
>> restore partition?!
>>
>>
>>
>
> Often, they do, yes.  Typically, it allows exactly one copy to be created,
> so, ensure that good media is used, and follow instructions to the letter.
>  Once that copy is attempted, no more are allowed.
>

None of this matters if you use Clonezilla.  So why even fiddle with it when
there's a great alternative?


Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark Allums

On 10/13/2010 6:43 PM, Tom H wrote:

On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Preston Boyington
  wrote:

Ogya Chief wrote:


At this stage there is no data to backup. If there is any other thing I
can backup, please let me know.


Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would suggest
burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" partition to a
DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard drive goes belly up
later you can slap a new one in and put the machine back to a factory state
if you wish.


Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
restore partition?!





Often, they do, yes.  Typically, it allows exactly one copy to be 
created, so, ensure that good media is used, and follow instructions to 
the letter.  Once that copy is attempted, no more are allowed.




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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark Allums

On 10/13/2010 9:25 AM, Damon L. Chesser wrote:

On Wed, 2010-10-13 at 00:24 +0200, Ogya Chief wrote:



I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for
partitioning/backup came with it and decide on my next course of
action.


Windows comes with a resizer:  right click on "my computer">  manage

diskmanager.  The next step is fuzzy in my memory:  right click on the

drive>  reszie?  Windows will now resize the partition, reboot and run
chck disk if needed first, reboot, re-run chck disk.  This eliminates
the need for manual intervention to ensure your NTFS is in a state that
can safely shrink.  Windows will also not allow you to shrink the
partition smaller then the data will fit on.



Windows is finicky about what you can do to the "system partition", 
however, this is worth trying, since, in principle, no utility would be 
more suitable than Windows' own.




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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Tom H
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 9:56 AM, Preston Boyington
 wrote:
> Ogya Chief wrote:
>>
>> At this stage there is no data to backup. If there is any other thing I
>> can backup, please let me know.
>
> Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would suggest
> burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" partition to a
> DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard drive goes belly up
> later you can slap a new one in and put the machine back to a factory state
> if you wish.

Don't all boxes ship with a utility to create restore DVDs from the
restore partition?!


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark
On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 11:21 AM, Joe  wrote:

> On 13/10/10 16:52, Mark wrote:
>
>>
>> As a side note, if it came with a big hard drive, from my experience I
>> suggest a 30-40 GB Windows 7 partition (yes it needs that much these
>> days),
>>
>
> That might be conservative. My Win7 is seven months old, and occupies 24GB
> (no data in that). I didn't make a note of the installation size, but it was
> a lot less than that. I allowed 65GB...


Yes, I should clarify my size recommendation is based on reducing the
bloatware, etc., to almost nothing, tweaking some settings, and eliminating
System Restore points (since I backup using Clonezilla those have no use to
me).

My current Windows 7 installation, including Office 2007 Professional, uses
16.2 GB of my 30 GB partition.  So this is one of those YMMV situations
depending on how determined one is to reduce the footprint of the Windows 7
installation.

Mark


Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Joe

On 13/10/10 16:52, Mark wrote:


As a side note, if it came with a big hard drive, from my experience I
suggest a 30-40 GB Windows 7 partition (yes it needs that much these days),


That might be conservative. My Win7 is seven months old, and occupies 
24GB (no data in that). I didn't make a note of the installation size, 
but it was a lot less than that. I allowed 65GB...


--
Joe


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Mark
2010/10/12 Γιώργος Πάλλας 

>
> For backing up the whole disk before starting with dangerous operations I
> suggest Clonezilla (the open-source equivalent of  Ghost). It use it
> regularly and hasn't betrayed me.
> As for the rest procedures, I also suggest you resize the windows partition
> with gparted from a ubuntu live cd, and then run the debian installer.
>
>
This is the right way to go.  First use jkdefraggui to defrag & move all
Windows 7 files to front of disk, from within Windows 7.  This helps avoid
data corruption before editing partitions.  Then create backup image using
Clonezilla.  Boot to gparted Live cd (or usb flash, I keep one handy at all
times with gparted Live on it for just such purposes), resize partitions,
including creating your ext3 and swap partitions for Debian, and all should
be set for your computer to receive the Debian installation.

As a side note, if it came with a big hard drive, from my experience I
suggest a 30-40 GB Windows 7 partition (yes it needs that much these days),
18 GB for Debian, 2 GB for swap, and the remainder as a "share" partition of
either fat32 or ntfs (which is mounted via ntfs-3g in Debian /etc/fstab).
Sorry if you already know this, just thought I'd offer it if you don't.

Mark


RE: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Damon L. Chesser
On Wed, 2010-10-13 at 00:24 +0200, Ogya Chief wrote:
> 
SNIP
> > 
> > 
> 
> I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for
> partitioning/backup came with it and decide on my next course of
> action.

Windows comes with a resizer:  right click on "my computer" > manage
>diskmanager.  The next step is fuzzy in my memory:  right click on the
drive> reszie?  Windows will now resize the partition, reboot and run
chck disk if needed first, reboot, re-run chck disk.  This eliminates
the need for manual intervention to ensure your NTFS is in a state that
can safely shrink.  Windows will also not allow you to shrink the
partition smaller then the data will fit on. 
-- 
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da...@damtek.com


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Preston Boyington

Ogya Chief wrote:

At this stage there is no data to backup. 
If there is any other thing I can backup, please let me know.
 


Since most newer computers don't come with a Restore disc, I would 
suggest burning the Restore partition and any associated "utility" 
partition to a DVD.  Usually it fits on one.  That way if your hard 
drive goes belly up later you can slap a new one in and put the machine 
back to a factory state if you wish.


I also recommend Clonezilla for taking snapshots of your working system. 
 It's slow on NTFS, but will fly through most Linux friendly filesystems.


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Where the road takes me - a highwayman's perspective
http://www.prestonboyington.com/


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread Γιώργος Πάλλας
On 13/10/2010 02:07 μμ, steef wrote:
> Γιώργος Πάλλας schreef:
>> On 13/10/2010 01:24 πμ, Ogya Chief wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> > If you care about Windows 7 at all (e.g., for playing games) you
>>> should
>>> > back up the Win 7 installation completely before starting. How you go
>>> > about it depends on your new machine. If it came with recovery
>>> options,
>>> > you should investigate them. With the Ultimate edition, Win 7 comes
>>> > with a good backup program, you can use that. Otherwise, you can look
>>> > to the various alternatives for backing up.
>>> >
>>> > But I urge you to use something. Most of the programs, free and
>>> > non-free, work properly to shrink a partition, but it is easy to
>>> commit
>>> > a user error and wipe things out completely.
>>> >
>>> > If it were me, I would shrink (resize) the partition first, before
>>> > running the Debian installer. That is, take it in reversible stages.
>>> > This is a matter of taste. It isn't strictly necessary.
>>> >
>>> >
>>>
>>> I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for
>>> partitioning/backup came with it and decide on my next course of
>>> action.
>>
>> For backing up the whole disk before starting with dangerous
>> operations I suggest Clonezilla (the open-source equivalent of
>> Ghost). It use it regularly and hasn't betrayed me.
>> As for the rest procedures, I also suggest you resize the windows
>> partition with gparted from a ubuntu live cd, and then run the debian
>> installer.
>>
>
> could dd_rescue be a suggestion?
>
> steef
>
>

dd_rescue for backup? Isn't it a bit low-level for the simple use of
backing up a disk? Clonezilla also does recognize the filesystems and
takes up space only for used disk space...



smime.p7s
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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-13 Thread steef

Γιώργος Πάλλας schreef:

On 13/10/2010 01:24 πμ, Ogya Chief wrote:



> If you care about Windows 7 at all (e.g., for playing games) you 
should

> back up the Win 7 installation completely before starting. How you go
> about it depends on your new machine. If it came with recovery 
options,

> you should investigate them. With the Ultimate edition, Win 7 comes
> with a good backup program, you can use that. Otherwise, you can look
> to the various alternatives for backing up.
>
> But I urge you to use something. Most of the programs, free and
> non-free, work properly to shrink a partition, but it is easy to 
commit

> a user error and wipe things out completely.
>
> If it were me, I would shrink (resize) the partition first, before
> running the Debian installer. That is, take it in reversible stages.
> This is a matter of taste. It isn't strictly necessary.
>
>

I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for 
partitioning/backup came with it and decide on my next course of action.


For backing up the whole disk before starting with dangerous 
operations I suggest Clonezilla (the open-source equivalent of Ghost). 
It use it regularly and hasn't betrayed me.
As for the rest procedures, I also suggest you resize the windows 
partition with gparted from a ubuntu live cd, and then run the debian 
installer.




could dd_rescue be a suggestion?

steef


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Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Γιώργος Πάλλας
On 13/10/2010 01:24 πμ, Ogya Chief wrote:
>
>  
> > If you care about Windows 7 at all (e.g., for playing games) you should
> > back up the Win 7 installation completely before starting. How you go
> > about it depends on your new machine. If it came with recovery options,
> > you should investigate them. With the Ultimate edition, Win 7 comes
> > with a good backup program, you can use that. Otherwise, you can look
> > to the various alternatives for backing up.
> >
> > But I urge you to use something. Most of the programs, free and
> > non-free, work properly to shrink a partition, but it is easy to commit
> > a user error and wipe things out completely.
> >
> > If it were me, I would shrink (resize) the partition first, before
> > running the Debian installer. That is, take it in reversible stages.
> > This is a matter of taste. It isn't strictly necessary.
> >
> >
>
> I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for
> partitioning/backup came with it and decide on my next course of action.

For backing up the whole disk before starting with dangerous operations
I suggest Clonezilla (the open-source equivalent of  Ghost). It use it
regularly and hasn't betrayed me.
As for the rest procedures, I also suggest you resize the windows
partition with gparted from a ubuntu live cd, and then run the debian
installer.



smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature


Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Mark Allums

On 10/12/2010 5:24 PM, Ogya Chief wrote:


I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for
partitioning/backup came with it and decide on my next course of action.


The reason to make a complete system snapshot first (and not just your 
data) is because Microsoft is greedy and has no sense of humor.  If you 
accidentally wipe out Windows, they might require you to buy it all over 
again.  Even if the manufacturer of your PC offers to send you a 
recovery disc, they will probably charge you a fee.


The Home Premium edition may not come with a full backup.  It may only 
backup whatever it thinks is your data, not the system files.  I recall 
that some Vista versions were that way.  I don't know about Win 7, you 
probably want to find out.



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RE: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Ogya Chief


 

> If you care about Windows 7 at all (e.g., for playing games) you should 
> back up the Win 7 installation completely before starting. How you go 
> about it depends on your new machine. If it came with recovery options, 
> you should investigate them. With the Ultimate edition, Win 7 comes 
> with a good backup program, you can use that. Otherwise, you can look 
> to the various alternatives for backing up.
> 
> But I urge you to use something. Most of the programs, free and 
> non-free, work properly to shrink a partition, but it is easy to commit 
> a user error and wipe things out completely.
> 
> If it were me, I would shrink (resize) the partition first, before 
> running the Debian installer. That is, take it in reversible stages. 
> This is a matter of taste. It isn't strictly necessary.
> 
> 


I have Win 7 home premium. I will find out what tools for partitioning/backup 
came with it and decide on my next course of action.
  

Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Mark Allums

On 10/12/2010 2:54 PM, Ogya Chief wrote:

Hi All,

I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to
partition and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian
installer's partitioner, what precautions do I have to take in order not
to damage the Windows partition?

Kind regards,
Ogya



If you care about Windows 7 at all (e.g., for playing games) you should 
back up the Win 7 installation completely before starting.  How you go 
about it depends on your new machine.  If it came with recovery options, 
you should investigate them.  With the Ultimate edition, Win 7 comes 
with a good backup program, you can use that.  Otherwise, you can look 
to the various alternatives for backing up.


But I urge you to use something.  Most of the programs, free and 
non-free, work properly to shrink a partition, but it is easy to commit 
a user error and wipe things out completely.


If it were me, I would shrink (resize) the partition first, before 
running the Debian installer. That is, take it in reversible stages. 
This is a matter of taste.  It isn't strictly necessary.






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RE: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Ogya Chief


 

> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> From: noela...@gmail.com
> Subject: Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed
> Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2010 22:02:28 +
> 
> On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 21:54:57 +0200, Ogya Chief wrote:
> 
> > I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to
> > partition and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian
> > installer's partitioner, what precautions do I have to take in order not
> > to damage the Windows partition?
> 
> I would make the partitions _before_ installing Debian.
> 
> You can use Gparted (LiveCD) and play from there. It allows to resize the 
> windows partition and create new ones.
> 
> Just remember that before performing any action on the current NTFS 
> partition (by instance, resize it) I would recommend to make a scandisk 
> and defragmentation of the involved volume (and a backup of the data) to 
> avoid any problem.
> 
> Greetings,
> 
> -- 
> Camaleón
> 
> 
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> 


Thanks, Camaleón, for the tip. At this stage there is no data to backup. If 
there is any other thing I can backup, please let me know.

 

Regards,

Ogya

  

Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Camaleón
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 21:54:57 +0200, Ogya Chief wrote:

> I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to
> partition and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian
> installer's partitioner, what precautions do I have to take in order not
> to damage the Windows partition?

I would make the partitions _before_ installing Debian.

You can use Gparted (LiveCD) and play from there. It allows to resize the 
windows partition and create new ones.

Just remember that before performing any action on the current NTFS 
partition (by instance, resize it) I would recommend to make a scandisk 
and defragmentation of the involved volume (and a backup of the data) to 
avoid any problem.

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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RE: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Ogya Chief


 


Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2010 13:28:15 -0700
Subject: Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed
From: mamar...@gmail.com
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org


On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 12:54 PM, Ogya Chief  wrote:


Hi All,
 
I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to partition 
and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian installer's partitioner, 
what precautions do I have to take in order not to damage the Windows partition?


I would suggest using jkdefraggui to move all Windows 7 files to the front of 
the disk, before doing any partitioning work, to help reduce the risk of 
messing up the Windows 7 installation.

Mark 

 

Thanks, Mark for the pointer. I will give it a try.
 
Regards,
Ogya  

Re: Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Mark
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 12:54 PM, Ogya Chief  wrote:

>  Hi All,
>
> I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to
> partition and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian installer's
> partitioner, what precautions do I have to take in order not to damage the
> Windows partition?
>

I would suggest using jkdefraggui to move all Windows 7 files to the front
of the disk, before doing any partitioning work, to help reduce the risk of
messing up the Windows 7 installation.

Mark


Partitioning a drive with Windows 7 already installed

2010-10-12 Thread Ogya Chief

Hi All,

 

I have just bought a pc with Windows 7 pre-installed and I want to partition 
and install debian on the drive. If I use the debian installer's partitioner, 
what precautions do I have to take in order not to damage the Windows partition?

 

Kind regards,

Ogya