Some installfest issues
Jim Kelly-Rand
JKelly-rand at kmwarch.com
Mon Apr 22 12:48:29 EDT 2002
I am not a System Admin. or some one who had the time to find a way around
the documented limitations, but I knew that if I put forth my experience
that if someone had found a way they/you would respond.
My next question would be to ask how the person at the installfest wanted
to share the common data between the 3 systems? As far as I know Linux
cannot write to an NTFS partition, nor can W98. Vice versa Wxx cannot write
to ext2-3, or am I mistaken? I could install NT and 98 to the most primitive
versions of the fat FS and then Linux could write to that format.
Jim Kelly-Rand
> -----Original Message-----
> On Mon, 22 Apr 2002, Jim Kelly-Rand wrote:
>
> > Ihave documentation at home of the process I went through
> to achieve an
> > NT/Linux dual boot but I am not there now.
> From: Matthew J. Brodeur [mailto:mbrodeur at NextTime.com]
>
> I have read the same documentation, and it's all wrong. I don't
> currently have a machine doing so, but it is quite possible to boot
> BIOS->LILO->NTLoader. I have done this in the past to create
> Linux/W95/WNT and Linux/W98/W2K systems.
> IIRC, and I might be misremembering, I would first
> partition the drive
> using Linux fdisk. Then I'd install Win9x in C: (first
> DOS-type Primary
> partition), WinNT in another DOS partition (usually formatted
> NTFS), and
> then Linux somewhere else. WinNT (or 2k) would see that I
> already had 9x
> installed, add an entry to NTLoader for me, and install it in
> the root
> block of C:. During the Linux install I'd create a LILO
> entry pointing to
> that partition (usually /dev/hda2, since /boot was hda1) and
> I'd just call
> it "Windows".
> This left me with one step to get to Linux (LILO->Linux),
> or two to
> either Windows (LILO->NTLoader->WinNT/9x). I found this to
> be much easier
> than tricking NTLoader into booting LILO.
>
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