Re: Booting a Freebsd HD on a windows box?

2006-12-05 Thread Jerry McAllister
On Tue, Dec 05, 2006 at 12:08:20AM -0500, Steve Lake wrote:

 Hi all.  I'm looking to merge two of my machines in my home office 
 into one to free up the second one for other uses, but one is a windows 
 machine, the second is my freebsd 5.3x machine.  Can I just move the HD 
 from the Freebsd machine over to the windows machine and add something to 
 the boot.ini file to make it bootable from the windows boot prompt, or do I 
 have to do something else?  Or can I just mirror the HD from the BSD box 
 into an image file, then just mount and boot that image using Vmware and 
 run it as a virtual machine?  I'm trying to find the simplest, most hassle 
 free way to merge the two machines without much tinkering with the existing 
 installs.  Any suggestions is welcome.  I only picked merging the bsd box 
 into the windows machine because the windows machine has the better 
 hardware.

Well, probably almost.
That will be making a dual-boot machine.  I have several in dual boot.
The only odd thing is doing it by combining two already made disks
rather than doing it from scratch.

First, you probably want the MS system to be in first disk the system
recognizes.   It is happier that way.

You will have to rewrite the MBR on that first disk and put the 
FreeBSD MBR there.   It will be able to boot either the MS or the FreeBSD
system, but the MS MBR will not.

You should be able to rewrite the MBR any time
You may need to do that from a bootable fixit CD.

NOTE:  that both disks will need to have the FreeBSD MBR, but maybe
  one currently running FreeBSD already has it.   It would hurt
  to make sure as it is possible to have installed a FreeBSD only
  system without the MBR.

You will probably also have to modify the fstab and possibly some other
configuration files on the FreeBSD disk to reflect different addresses.
Since the disk will then look like  ad1 or da1  instead of  ad0 or da0.
(Of course ad0-ad1 for IDE type disk or da0-da1 for SCSI type)

You would want to modify the /etc/fstab file just before the very last
time taking it down before making the change.

Otherwise, it should work OK.

Now, here is another thing to consider.   Now would be an excellent 
time to move to a more up-to-date version of FreeBSD.  Try installing 6.1 
or waiting a few days and installing 6.2 when it comes out.

Have fun, Good luck,

jerry

 Steven Lake
 Owner/Technical Writer
 Raiden's Realm
 www.raiden.net
 A friendly web community
 
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Re: Booting a Freebsd HD on a windows box?

2006-12-05 Thread Garrett Cooper

Jerry McAllister wrote:
Well, probably almost. That will be making a dual-boot machine. I have 
several in dual boot. The only odd thing is doing it by combining two 
already made disks rather than doing it from scratch.

First, you probably want the MS system to be in first disk the system 
recognizes.   It is happier that way.
  
It has to be that way; whoever planned out the installation for Windows 
basically required that the first system disk (either EIDE or SCSI) be 
the Windows system disk. Unfortunately there's no way to chicken out of 
doing that. You can choose which partition you want the Windows 
installation to go on to as long as it's primary (1-4) and not extended 
(4-8?).

-Garrett
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