Jason W. Morgan [Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:49:15PM -0400]:
GRUB menu. It's not difficult, but it does add an extra step. Also, be
sure to keep a backup of your modified GRUB config---it seems that
each time Ubuntu decides it needs to perform a significant update, it
replaces the GRUB config with
On 2008.08.11 18:05:10, Jack Raats wrote:
I would like to put FreeBSD, Ubuntu and WInXP on one system using a boot
manager.
Which version do I have to put first on the harddisk, which second and which
last?
I also want to know which bootmanager to use?
Thanks for your time
On Monday 11 August 2008, Jason W. Morgan wrote:
it seems that
each time Ubuntu decides it needs to perform a significant update, it
replaces the GRUB config with the default, making FreeBSD once again
inaccessible. There is probably a way to prevent this, but I never
got around to
hors configure your kernel-img file correctly :
[EMAIL PROTECTED] grep hook /etc/kernel-img.conf
postinst_hook = /usr/sbin/update-grub
postrm_hook = /usr/sbin/update-grub
just comment out these.
On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 6:24 PM, Mike Clarke
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 11 August 2008,
On 2008.08.14 19:05:22, nicodache wrote:
hors configure your kernel-img file correctly :
[EMAIL PROTECTED] grep hook /etc/kernel-img.conf
postinst_hook = /usr/sbin/update-grub
postrm_hook = /usr/sbin/update-grub
just comment out these.
Good to know, if I ever use Ubuntu again.
Thanks,
Jason W Morgan wrote:
Also, be sure to keep a backup of your modified GRUB config---it seems
that each time Ubuntu decides it needs to perform a significant update,
it replaces the GRUB config with the default, making FreeBSD once again
inaccessible. There is probably a way to prevent this,
I would like to put FreeBSD, Ubuntu and WInXP on one system using a boot
manager.
Which version do I have to put first on the harddisk, which second and which
last?
I also want to know which bootmanager to use?
Thanks for your time
Greeting
Jack
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 11:05 AM, Jack Raats [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would like to put FreeBSD, Ubuntu and WInXP on one system using a boot
manager.
Which version do I have to put first on the harddisk, which second and
which last?
I also want to know which bootmanager to use?
Thanks
I recommend installing FreeBSD first, then Windows and then Ubuntu. For
reasons that I don't know, WinXP SP3 will become unable to start if you
installs FreeBSD after it (It will freeze on the welcome screen). - I don't
know if this problem just happened with me or with others people too, but it
Le Mon, 11 Aug 2008 18:05:10 +0200,
Jack Raats [EMAIL PROTECTED] a écrit :
I would like to put FreeBSD, Ubuntu and WInXP on one system using a
boot manager.
Which version do I have to put first on the harddisk, which second
and which last?
I also want to know which bootmanager to use?
On Monday 11 August 2008, Bruno Schmitt wrote:
Ubuntu uses GRUB boot manager and as far as I remember it won't
recognize FreeBSD partition out of the box, so you will have to add
some lines to /boot/grub/menu.lst
# For booting FreeBSD
title FreeBSD 5.2
root (hd0,a)
chainloader +1
Sorry for not making myself clear... When I said Ubuntu uses GRUB boot
manager and as far as I remember it won't recognize FreeBSD partition out of
the box I was referring to the GRUB installed by Ubuntu installation which
won't come with FreeBSD partition configured.
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at
I recommend installing FreeBSD first, then Windows and then
Ubuntu ...
Unless something has changed since the last time I was messing with
this sort of thing, one hazard of installing a Linux last is that
there may by then be no space left for the /boot partition, which
has to be below cylinder
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