LL Phillips wrote:
>
> Regarding the statement "Each would need a separate partition, AFAIK"
> I've recently considered dual booting my W98SE hard drive which is 40G
> total size with only 20G used made up of C: primary partition and
> D,E,F,G,H all logical drives in one extended partition (each around
> 3-6G each)
>
> When I put in my W98SE boot disk to make a second PRIMARY partition I
> was not allowed because fdisk told me there was already a primary
> partition existing.
Probably a few reasons:
- the disk has no room for another partition, PRIMARY or otherwise.
- perhaps, once an 'extended' partition is created,
no further 'primary' partitions can be created.
- Perhaps [MS|PC]DOS cannot create a second primary partition.
- perhaps you should use a 'linux' fdisk to create partitions
to install linux. ;-)
/dev/hda1 20G /WIN98SE
/dev/hda2 20G extended
/dev/hda3 3G /Debian '/'
/dev/hda6 3G /Peanut '/'
/dev/hda7 3G /share7 ;shared filesystem
/dev/hda8 3G /share8 ;whatever filesystem that both Debian and Peanut
;can r/w.
...
Install either of the linux distributions last as Windows(r)
overwrites the MBR.
Linux 'lilo' can boot with a menu to choose which o/s to boot
and a default o/s to boot after # seconds.
> If I wanted to have W98SE, Debian and Peanut Linux all on the same
> drive how would I go about that. Was I wrong to put in the W98SE boot
> / rescue disk.
I recommend using linux fdisk to create/modify partitions to install
the linux o/s into. Also, create/modify them to be a linux type;
'second extended' and 'swap' are the only filesystems the I have used
(Type 83 linux native & type 82 linux swap).
Yes, you can install linux into DOS type partitions, however I
do not recommend it.
Yes, linux can read/write DOS/WIN (2.x, 3.x,9x, ME filesystems
(but can only read WIN-NT & WIN-2000 filesystems).
Lindows (I'm an insider
> /pre-general-release-by-subscription user) will install beside windows
> if one has space on the drive, (it is called a friendly install). I
> felt it was too risky to proceed because I didn't want to damage my
> W98SE main everyday machine. Asus A7V motherboard.
You might damage your W98SE files, but I doubt that you will damage
your 'machine'. :-|
> Would you advise using a Linux distribution root / boot diskette
> combination to set up my hard drive. (I've ruined about 8 laptop
> drives in the past trying so am nervous).
If you have a BIOS that can boot from a CD-ROM drive,
I recommend installing linux from a bootable CD-ROM disk. ;-)
I'm hoping you mean that after you created linux filesystems
on a hard drive, Windows could not recognize the drive. :-|
I'd like to hear more about how a drive was damaged by a linux
boot/root diskette. Sounds like a 'Slackware' install to me.
If you 'linux fdisk' a hard drive and place only linux type partitions
on it, it will not be recognized by DOS-Windows*. If you use
linux fdisk to create DOS/WIN partitions, DOS/WIN will recognize it
(I think it will recognize the first partition and any sequential
partitions that are DOS/WIN, but no further partitions after the first
non-DOS/WIN partition).
;-)
> Lorraine
>
> chuck gelm wrote:
> >
> > Hi, Geoff:
> >
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