jamesk 0 Posted March 29, 2004 Hi, I installed Redhat 9 and created 4 hda partions, I want to install WinNT server on the same computer,I am using a bootable CD but the comp loads only Redhat and not the setup screen for NT. What can I do get around this. james Share this post Link to post
Dapper Dan 0 Posted March 29, 2004 Sounds to me like your bios is not set to boot from cd. Did you install RH9 beginning with a boot floppy? Share this post Link to post
Dapper Dan 0 Posted March 29, 2004 I've never done what you are trying to do so I have no advice there, maybe danleff can assist you with that, but you need to set your bios to boot from cdrom. At startup, you should see something like, "Press F2 for setup." or something. That is to access your bios. Hold what ever key it says to down until your bios comes up. Change the boot order so cdrom comes before booting from HDD. Don't change anything else in the bios! When you are sure you have it set right, save it and try rebooting from the cdrom again. Share this post Link to post
jimf43 0 Posted March 29, 2004 Sorry to tell you now, but, it's a real good idea to install Windows first, and, to have your NT install on the first partition of the first drive. Linux can then be put on any primary partition and LILO or Grub will have no problem finding the Windows volume. Trying to put in windows after Linux is a real pita. Share this post Link to post
danleff 0 Posted March 29, 2004 I only have one more thing to add. The reason for installing Win first, is that by installing it after RedHat, it will overwrite the MBR and most likely trash the lilo or grub bootloader for RedHat. Windows installations are not friendly with Linux when installed last. There is a way to boot RedHat (in theory anyway) after the fact through boot.ini (the windows bootloader), but that is a bit complicated. The question is, did you make a boot floppy when you installed RedHat? This will allow you to get into RedHat again and re-write lilo or grub to the MBR. Then you can add the commands to lilo or grub for Windows afterwards. Share this post Link to post
SoulNothing 0 Posted March 29, 2004 hey james i had the same issue per sey recentley when trying to install another version of linux it went straight to grub i kept reconfiguring bios to no avail i did this mostly because windows ate my whole hard drive some how anyway heres how i fixed my problem you can try if you like its worth a shot before installing a whole nother os i grabbed BOOT IT NG it says partition but it also does boot install that grub and boot it will be trying to boot so it goes to the cd that should do the trick (note this only works if you either have lilo or grub) Share this post Link to post
jimf43 0 Posted March 29, 2004 Originally posted by SoulNothing: Quote: i grabbed BOOT IT NG Yeah... I have that too.... After reading the technical documentation, I decided 'not' to use it... Once you put it in you'll have quite a time removing it. Scared the s#@t out of me.... Lilo & Grub are bad enough ;-). Share this post Link to post
SoulNothing 0 Posted March 30, 2004 i dont see what the big deal is every body says its hard to remove ive removed and installed it so many times it isnt even a problem maybe its because i never pay attention to read mes oh well other than that it works pretty well this was the first tool i found when first going to partition for linux drives Share this post Link to post
danleff 0 Posted March 30, 2004 Interesting product, but it requires knowledge about systems, partitioning and multiple OS schemes. I just read the documentation..very interesting! The documentation is a must read for users. If you are not cautious, you may trash your multiple boot ability on uninstall. However, I have a few questions for SoulNothing. This is shareware. I got the sense from the Cnet user reviews that multiple OS users may have issues uninstalling the product and retaining their original ability to boot all their OS'. 1. What has been your experience with this? 2. Do any features, besides the image stuff get disabled after the 30 day trial? In other words, can it be used without paying the registration fee to safely recover your old scheme, or add new distros? My point being is that the average user may not change his/her configuration or add new distros, but us multi-distro bugs need to change the number of OS' that we use. Therefore we need to retain all the features, especially for an uninstall. 3. It appears that if you choose the "limit partitions" option, then BootitNG takes over as the MBR and uninstalling it works, as long as you do not have more than 4 primary partitions at the time of uninstall. If you choose "do not limit partitions" then it seems that you can regain control of the system easier (your multiple boot options) when uninstalling. I assume this is what you have done to make a successful uninstall? 4. Can it be used totally from the CD, without installing to the hard disk? This way, you can "remaster" the boot CD when you add or remove distros? I hope that I have been clear in my questions. The point...read the directions carefully before using it! Share this post Link to post
SoulNothing 0 Posted March 30, 2004 danleff asked me a question wow im a newbie too first thing i gotta say is this thing is shareware??? oh well 1. What has been your experience with this? i really enjoy this as a product it seems to work well 2. Do any features, besides the image stuff get disabled after the 30 day trial? In other words, can it be used without paying the registration fee to safely recover your old scheme, or add new distros? My point being is that the average user may not change his/her configuration or add new distros, but us multi-distro bugs need to change the number of OS' that we use. Therefore we need to retain all the features, especially for an uninstall. i dont know how i did it but one time i got two red hats and a fedora plus xp on my pc i installed boot it ng first then i guess it carried it over to grub because it had it configured for me still but if your not to familiar then more than likely your going to have to do some playing around, but i didnt use it to create partitions because it did mess with my mbr how i did it was like this i grabbed this reassured the size created a boot record, 29th day make a new copy re install and it worked fine. (im not to clear on this question) i think peoples main issue is it installs on to its own 4mb partition as Fat32 but it can only manage and see 4 partitions not counting floppy and cds. (if this is rambling A. im in the middle of class teacher row behind me , and B. sorta confused on question think it needs to be broken up) 3. It appears that if you choose the "limit partitions" option, then BootitNG takes over as the MBR and uninstalling it works, as long as you do not have more than 4 primary partitions at the time of uninstall. ive never dealt with more than 4 partitions at one time so this one has sorta got me lost, but there was that one time thinking of it chopping the hard drive to death something like this and i only had one boot sector on it from boot it ng but then i reinforced it to two boot sectors heres a sample of what i did but i wouldnt recommend above four partitions with this products it made 9 gigs disapearr 2 gig swap 10 gig ntfs 10 gig ntfs 10 gig ntfs 10 gig ntfs 10 gig ntfs 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 5 gig linux 20 gig swap and yes i was loaded on tons of coffee that night If you choose "do not limit partitions" then it seems that you can regain control of the system easier (your multiple boot options) when uninstalling. I assume this is what you have done to make a successful uninstall? um honestly danleff sometimes im so hyper at the computer i close my eyes and move the mouse at random and click randomly then open my eyes in thirty seconds so im guessing 50/50 4. Can it be used totally from the CD, without installing to the hard disk? This way, you can "remaster" the boot CD when you add or remove distros? i have a boot floppy stuck in my floppy drive that contains it that never leaves it so i run it off a floppy all the time i could probaly be more helpful with number two if you broke it up some and if this dont help dont worry im known as incoherrent Share this post Link to post
SoulNothing 0 Posted March 30, 2004 jim i just looked at the manual i was like 2 pages in and saw it was 48 pages long its safe if you dont know what your doing, because i didnt use any of the things they said for you to do i could see why everyone is scared now they need better writers thats why and the reason i migrated to this is simply because of the fact that i couldnt find partition magic or any other pArtiotion app for free at the time this was when i was first starting out and i like it so much ive stuck with it but danleff if you got a good partition app then stick with no sense with migrating unless your trying to learn something new Share this post Link to post
shobhit 0 Posted March 30, 2004 did you create a linux boot disk during the install process. if not then better make one now. first you need to configure your BIOS to boot from CD, then install your windows. then you can use linux boot disk to boot into linux because your mbr will be overwritten and grub will be gone. goto /sbin type 'grub' you will be presented with a grub prompt there you can use the following commands find /boot/grub/stage1 it will give you some thing as (hdx,y) where x will represent your hdd and y will give your partiton which has the relevant file then type root (hdx,y) setup (hdx) grub will be setup on your mbr and will automatically detect your windows installation so no problem Share this post Link to post