b...@fanatick.org (Bob Bernstein) writes: >I see from some research that I am not the first (of course! duh >Bob!) to run afoul this mishap with the boot manager:
>Fn: diskn >1. NetBSD >...with nary a hint of my Windows partition on this disk, and >this even after I went back and reassigned "active" to the >Windows partition after I had at first given that privilege to >my new NetBSD partition. You only see the partitions that have a menu entry. You can set a menu entry when you create or update a partition in the MBR, .e.g. with 'fdisk -u'. >With 'fdisk -B' I edited the boot selector to look like this: >0 The first active partition >1.NetBSD >2.Harddisk 0 >...and agreed to write those changes to the MBR, but they never >appear at boot time, only when I execute 'fdisk -B'. The boot selector lets you boot from the first active partition (hit "return") boot from a partition with a menu entry (hit a digit '1'..) load the MBR of a drive (hit F1.. or 'a'.. for the serial console) fdisk -B only configures the timeout for the boot selector and the default choice when no key was pressed. To add your windows partition you need to give it a menu entry with fdisk -u. -- -- Michael van Elst Internet: mlel...@serpens.de "A potential Snark may lurk in every tree."