Mailinglist Archive: opensuse (3468 mails)
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Re: [opensuse] Grub won't boot Windoze
- From: Mike McCallister <workingwriter@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 20:55:14 -0500
- Message-id: <200704182055.15671.workingwriter@xxxxxxxxxxx>
On Tuesday 17 April 2007 14:09, Darryl Gregorash wrote:
> >> <snip>
>
> Is that XP? If so, you should not need to remap the drives at all. Where
> was it originally installed? To the first partition on the second drive?
> (D: in Windows-speak). If so, then your Windows section should read:
>
> rootnoverify (hd1,0)
> chainloader (hd1,0) +1
>
> If it was installed to C: instead (which I presume is the first
> partition of the first drive), then this should read:
>
> rootnoverify (hd0,0)
> chainloader (hd0,0) +1
>
> You can add "makeactive" between the two lines if you wish, but unless
> you are also booting a DOS-like OS (eg. Win98), it is absolutely
> unnecessary to do so. XP (or 2K) should already have made the partition
> active when you installed that.
Darryl,
If you're asking where Grub is installed, I'm not sure. XP is installed on its
own physical drive, /dev/sda (aka hd1 in device.map). SUSE is installed
on /dev/hda (aka hd0). Grub initially had just the plain rootnoverify and
chainloader lines (and I think I've tried all the hd0 and hd0 permutations
for those lines, and XP still won't boot.
I did remove the makeactive line from menu.lst after your note, but that
didn't make any difference.
The fact that I get a second Grub window when I choose to boot XP might be a
clue, perhaps. I was playing with all sorts of settings in YaST, and I'm
starting to wonder whether I've got a copy of Grub on each physical drive.
I'm not sure how I'd remove the copy on the NTFS drive, though. Thoughts
appreciated.
Mike McCallister
--
Mike McCallister ProTek Writing Services
workingwriter@xxxxxxxxxxx "Translation from the Geek a specialty"
Notes from the Metaverse: http://metaverse.wordpress.com
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxx
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@xxxxxxxxxxxx
> >> <snip>
>
> Is that XP? If so, you should not need to remap the drives at all. Where
> was it originally installed? To the first partition on the second drive?
> (D: in Windows-speak). If so, then your Windows section should read:
>
> rootnoverify (hd1,0)
> chainloader (hd1,0) +1
>
> If it was installed to C: instead (which I presume is the first
> partition of the first drive), then this should read:
>
> rootnoverify (hd0,0)
> chainloader (hd0,0) +1
>
> You can add "makeactive" between the two lines if you wish, but unless
> you are also booting a DOS-like OS (eg. Win98), it is absolutely
> unnecessary to do so. XP (or 2K) should already have made the partition
> active when you installed that.
Darryl,
If you're asking where Grub is installed, I'm not sure. XP is installed on its
own physical drive, /dev/sda (aka hd1 in device.map). SUSE is installed
on /dev/hda (aka hd0). Grub initially had just the plain rootnoverify and
chainloader lines (and I think I've tried all the hd0 and hd0 permutations
for those lines, and XP still won't boot.
I did remove the makeactive line from menu.lst after your note, but that
didn't make any difference.
The fact that I get a second Grub window when I choose to boot XP might be a
clue, perhaps. I was playing with all sorts of settings in YaST, and I'm
starting to wonder whether I've got a copy of Grub on each physical drive.
I'm not sure how I'd remove the copy on the NTFS drive, though. Thoughts
appreciated.
Mike McCallister
--
Mike McCallister ProTek Writing Services
workingwriter@xxxxxxxxxxx "Translation from the Geek a specialty"
Notes from the Metaverse: http://metaverse.wordpress.com
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxx
For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@xxxxxxxxxxxx
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