dual boot freebsd and win2k
Cecil
ceco108 at gimail.af.mil
Sat Feb 17 23:43:22 UTC 2007
I got it and this is what I did, I am dense at times, I installed
FreeBSD installed Win2K on the FreeBSD install disk ---> Custom install---->partition
harddrive----> (it gets fun here) set the FreeBSD Active ----> hit the 'W' key to force write the MBR ---> rebooted
and now I have a choice of F1-- FreeBSD or F2 --DOS ---- Thank you
all my last post and will
Ian Smith 2/17/07 1:11:01 AM
ceco108 at gimail.af.mil
freebsd-mobile at freebsd.org
Re: (no subject)
>I've always had success putting a DOS 'partition' as the first
slice
>(ad0s1). In the old days (FreeBSD 2 & 3) this helped establish the
>drive geometry for FreeBSD, and while this is no longer relevant, it
>assures that any version of DOS/win will see itself as on 'drive
C:'
>
>I've not used w2k (yet, but suspect I'll have to soon to upgrade
my
>Thinkpad T23's BIOS), but have installed various DOS versions and Win98
>in the first slice of several boxes without problems. Since (I gather)
>you still have the freedom to experiment, I suggest trying that.
>
>You're probably lucky if w2k will use fat32 rather than terms
>of being able to access it read/write from FreeBSD. Another
option is
>using a DOS 'extended' partition as say slice 2, formatted fat32,
for
>common access from win and FreeBSD (and/or Linux ..) >
> Thanks for all the comments but I must not be doing something
right!
> Here's outline of the install process.
> 1. Partition a single 40GB harddrive using FDISK and make the
FreeBSD
> partition Active
> 2. Set the second partition as DOS fat ->> install Win2K in
the Dos
> partition ->> then doing the install I think it formats the DOS
> partition to fat32 and overwrites the MBR for FreeBSD
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