DAMAGED x86 Boot Partition...
After installing Windows 2000 my x86 Boot partition got damaged.
Can anyone tell me how to fix this problem.
I can boot from the solaris partition from the installation disks but I would like to fix the x86 Boot partition so that I don't have to use the CD everytime I want to boot Solaris.
Thanks for your help!
When you installed Windows 2000, I'm thinking it made IT'S system partition the active partition. You should be able to use Disk Administrator to set the Solaris boot partition active. Hopefully the Solaris boot partition has recognized your FAT/NTFS partition(s) so it will show up in the boot program menu. If not, you may have to get like Boot Magic or some freeware equivalent...
Similar Messages
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Power outage, boot partition is damaged..what do I do?
fml..I've had a few power outages before but I think this time did it. I'm running dual boot with both windows 7 and mac with boot camp. I can get to the page where you can select which operating system you want to boot in but once the starting windows page comes up it just freezes and I can't get past it (same for booting in mac, it freezes at the page with the circular loading bar). If I try running with the "windows startup repair mode" a bar loads for a while, then a green bar comes up with the windows logo and then after that it all goes black. So I looked this problem up and I'm assuming that my boot partition is damaged. I have a windows 7 and mac os cd but none of them can load in. Would a usb, external cd drive work?
I also read online to try using a Linux cd. I have that too, so should I try that?
And I'm guessing there's no way to save any of my files on the hard drive?Interesting problem. It's good you looked up a few things before posting here - if it were me (and I have no direct experience to offer) I'd want to know if everything "looks good" under Disk Utility. That is, boot to your OSX install DVD, select Language, wait for the toolbar to appear and click Utilities then Disk Utility. I'm thinking you will "see" your partition showing your OSX & Windows install. You could check your OSX disk and perhaps "Repair" it. That is one possibility. The Linux idea has potential for Boot To Disk operations - but so does rEFit Boot Disk (see it on Google). It's a lot of learning curve. Your files are still there. You can pay someone to "save" them to storage (both OSX & Windows) or you can download software that also does a great job (the better ones cost money). Finally - remember it is possible on a healthy machine to erase your OSX part (Disk Utility) by itself and perform a fresh install (losing all your OSX data and personal files) without harming the Windows side at all. In your case this is a slight risk and it depends on whether or not everything things still "look good" from the Disk Utility (Boot) as mentioned at the top of this post.
These are merely ideas to play with that may or may not work. If your recovery is critical, you need better information than what I offer here, but I'm just posting to say you have lots of options. You can explore on your own at a risk, or get someone with real experience and skills.
I invite others chime in on this one - lots of luck!
Message was edited by: NA Smith -
Data recovery from corrupt boot partition
The boot partition on my MacBook running 10.7.6 has a corrupt volume structure and will not mount, much less boot. The recovery partition boots but really doesn't let me do anything. Disk Utility can't repair nor even complete verification. I have lots of images which I need to recover, so am looking for a utility which might help.
Everything was apparently ok until the failure and the drive hardware checked out ok, so I'm hopeful my files are recoverable. A week or so ago I optimized the volume with TechTool Pro and the directory with DiskWarrior, and last night attempted to sync 1Password on my iPad with 1Password for Mac. This did no t work, probably because of my unfamiliarity with the procedure, but seemed to do no damage. When I ran TTPro last night from its eDrive partition it reported a volume structure problem on the partition which I started to fix with the program but then cancelled the analysis and decided to use disk utility instead. Disk utility also reported a problem but stopped the verification with the instruction to do a repair which it again could not complete. When I rebooted the system partition would again not boot but this time I got grey screen with a message that the debugger had loaded and <panic>. A message box said power down and restart, but that only repeats the process.
I'm thinking of attempting to install a system on an external boot drive and accessing the corrupt partition with a data recovery utility. Any insights, ideas or shared experiences appreciated. Thanks in advance for any desperately needed help.The safest thing to do here is to install a new disk in the system and do a clean install of OS X. From there, you can put your corrupted volume in an external USB enclosure and mount the file system to try and recover as much data as you can.
It's likely obvious now, but it's REALLY worth investing in a large-capacity external storage or Time Capsure to use with Time Machine. Backups are essential. Hardware always eventually dies. We all need an effective strategy to deal with that.
A long time ago, I was backing my Linux system up to 4mm DAT. When the inevitable HDD crash came, I thought I was ready. Unfortunately, I hadn't tested recovery from tape and I ended up losing everything. Which is to say, until you know you can restore, you don't even have a backup. I lost thousands upon thousands of photos of my kids growing up.
BTW, if it is essential that you recover as much as possible, consider taking the disk to a data recovery service. Be warned: It's expensive. -
Grub-install fails to install core.img to boot partition
I am trying to reinstall Arch onto a Dell Precision T3600 workstation, where it used to work fine, but I am stuck at the booloader step.
Details:
1. I have only one disk, partioned with gpt.
2. I am using Grub with Bios
3. As per installation instructions (preliminary requirements, BIOS systems), I created a 1007KiB boot partition at the beginning of the disk, of type ef02.
The partition (which is umber 5 in my partition table) goes from sector 34 to sector 2047
4. I mounted the root partition to /mnt, arch-chroot'd into it, and ran
# grub-install --target=i386-pc --recheck --debug /dev/sdx
# grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
5. I generated the /boot/grub.cfg file with the recommended
# grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
Results:
when I try to boot, grub starts, but it cannot find anything to boot from and drops me into its shell.
Furthermore (this may be unrelated), when I take a look at the dis again (after rebooting from the install disk), I see that the gpt partition table is corrupted. Exact message from gdisk is:
Caution: invalid backup GPT header, but valid main header: regenerating backup header from main header:
Partition table scan:
MBR: protective
BSD: not present
APM: not present
GPT: damaged
Can anyone tell me where I am going wrong? The Installation manual is not very explicit on how to deal with the (very small) boot partition. Is grub-install supposed to create the core.img file even when the partition is not mounted? Or should it be mounted. It certainly cannot contain eveyrthing that goes into /boot (which is over 100Mb).
Thanks for the helpHead_on_a_Stick wrote:
Your partition table is corrupted; you could clear it using:
# dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sd<x> bs=512 count=1; sync
Then use gdisk to recreate your partition table and re-install.
Alternatively, you could ask gdisk to re-create the backup GPT header from the main header: start up the program & press "r" followed by "d".
I had already fixed the partition table exactly as you suggested---sorry for not having been clear. It still does not boot.
Head_on_a_Stick wrote:
Your partition table is corrupted; you could clear it using:
If it still will not boot, post your /boot/grub/grub.cfg along with the output of:
# gdisk -l /dev/sd<x>
lsblk -f
Here they are:
/boot/grub.cfg:
# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE
# It is automatically generated by grub-mkconfig using templates
# from /etc/grub.d and settings from /etc/default/grub
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/00_header ###
insmod part_gpt
insmod part_msdos
if [ -s $prefix/grubenv ]; then
load_env
fi
if [ "${next_entry}" ] ; then
set default="${next_entry}"
set next_entry=
save_env next_entry
set boot_once=true
else
set default="0"
fi
if [ x"${feature_menuentry_id}" = xy ]; then
menuentry_id_option="--id"
else
menuentry_id_option=""
fi
export menuentry_id_option
if [ "${prev_saved_entry}" ]; then
set saved_entry="${prev_saved_entry}"
save_env saved_entry
set prev_saved_entry=
save_env prev_saved_entry
set boot_once=true
fi
function savedefault {
if [ -z "${boot_once}" ]; then
saved_entry="${chosen}"
save_env saved_entry
fi
function load_video {
if [ x$feature_all_video_module = xy ]; then
insmod all_video
else
insmod efi_gop
insmod efi_uga
insmod ieee1275_fb
insmod vbe
insmod vga
insmod video_bochs
insmod video_cirrus
fi
if [ x$feature_default_font_path = xy ] ; then
font=unicode
else
insmod part_gpt
insmod ext2
set root='hd0,gpt3'
if [ x$feature_platform_search_hint = xy ]; then
search --no-floppy --fs-uuid --set=root --hint-bios=hd0,gpt3 --hint-efi=hd0,gpt3 --hint-baremetal=ahci0,gpt3 74c69286-1775-44de-90c8-3834585da6b6
else
search --no-floppy --fs-uuid --set=root 74c69286-1775-44de-90c8-3834585da6b6
fi
font="/usr/share/grub/unicode.pf2"
fi
if loadfont $font ; then
set gfxmode=auto
load_video
insmod gfxterm
set locale_dir=$prefix/locale
set lang=en_US
insmod gettext
fi
terminal_input console
terminal_output gfxterm
if [ x$feature_timeout_style = xy ] ; then
set timeout_style=menu
set timeout=5
# Fallback normal timeout code in case the timeout_style feature is
# unavailable.
else
set timeout=5
fi
### END /etc/grub.d/00_header ###
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/10_linux ###
### END /etc/grub.d/10_linux ###
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/20_linux_xen ###
### END /etc/grub.d/20_linux_xen ###
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober ###
### END /etc/grub.d/30_os-prober ###
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/40_custom ###
# This file provides an easy way to add custom menu entries. Simply type the
# menu entries you want to add after this comment. Be careful not to change
# the 'exec tail' line above.
### END /etc/grub.d/40_custom ###
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/41_custom ###
if [ -f ${config_directory}/custom.cfg ]; then
source ${config_directory}/custom.cfg
elif [ -z "${config_directory}" -a -f $prefix/custom.cfg ]; then
source $prefix/custom.cfg;
fi
### END /etc/grub.d/41_custom ###
### BEGIN /etc/grub.d/60_memtest86+ ###
### END /etc/grub.d/60_memtest86+ ###
lsblk -f (sda1 is the swap partition, sda5 is the boot partition):
NAME FSTYPE LABEL UUID MOUNTPOINT
sda
sda1
sda3 /
sda4 /home
sda5
sr0
loop0
loop1
arch_root-image /etc/resolv.conf
loop2
arch_root-image /etc/resolv.conf
Finally, here is the partition table from gdisk -l
GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 0.8.10
Partition table scan:
MBR: protective
BSD: not present
APM: not present
GPT: present
Found valid GPT with protective MBR; using GPT.
Disk /dev/sda: 1953525168 sectors, 931.5 GiB
Logical sector size: 512 bytes
Disk identifier (GUID): 8B675D08-1A4A-44D3-ADC3-A7763E331455
Partition table holds up to 128 entries
First usable sector is 34, last usable sector is 1953525134
Partitions will be aligned on 8-sector boundaries
Total free space is 0 sectors (0 bytes)
Number Start (sector) End (sector) Size Code Name
1 2048 67112959 32.0 GiB 8200 Linux swap
3 67112960 276828159 100.0 GiB 8300 Linux filesystem
4 276828160 1953525134 799.5 GiB 8300 Linux filesystem
5 34 2047 1007.0 KiB EF02 BIOS boot partition -
Lost data on /boot partition [solved]
Lost data on /boot partition. Is there a way to recover it with Archlinux CD?
Last edited by primez (2010-04-08 18:45:53)i think the easiest is to chroot into your installation, and then do a pacman -S kernel26
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How can I access my user folder on a second boot partition?
Hi there. Thank you for reading this. I am at a bit of a loss although I have searched several forums to find someone having the same problem:
I use my Macbook Pro in the office and at home. To keep things strictly apart and have to separate Time Machine backup procedures, I have divided my harddrive into two boot partitions ('office' and 'private') and installed Mountain Lion on both of them. Now occasionally when I am at the office I would like to access my user folder on 'private' to retrieve a file from the documents folder there (e.g. a paper I gave in my free time but would like to send to a colleague). Now although I see the 'private' volume, and the other user folder and the Documents folder in it with a red 'No Access' badge, even when I set read/write permissions via Command-I > Permissions for my current account, I do not see any files in it apart from Microsoft User Data. I have tried enabling the root user but with the sam result.
Do I really have to shut down the computer and boot with the 'private' boot volume in order to access the files on 'private'>user?
Looking forward to your suggestions! Thank you in advance!
ChristianTo solve this issue permanently, is to first disconnect both TimeMachine drives.
Boot into one partition and consider it history, make a note of everything, apps, export bookmarks, serial keys and files to a regular external drive. (non TimeMachine)
If on a hard drive, consider the first partition for performance, the second one is going to be slower. (SSD no need)
Next what you do is boot into the first partition and use Disk Utility to erase (with zero option if a hard drive) the other partition. Then use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the first partition to the second. (should be about equal sizes or tweak before cloning.)
Repair permissions on both partitions in Disk Utility.
Next boot into the second partition and install/uninstall apps and files. etc and set it backup up the way you had it.
Once your sure, then update TimeMachine for each one.
Now you will be able to easily access the other bootable partition as long as your logged into the same account name on the first partition., in other words you can access the same named account on both partitions and trade files without rebooting.
Because it's a clone, you have the same access privileges to the files on the other partition.
If your a power user, your going to find bootable clones are a much superior option than TimeMachine
Most commonly used backup methods -
Error code -50 on boot partition (Mac OS Extended (Journaled) )
I`m often experiencing error code -50 when trying to change or move files on boot partition (Mac OS Extended (Journaled) ) on my MacBook PRO 5,5.
I already know that this error is related to MS-DOS formatted disks. But this one is all the time Mac OS Extended (Journaled).
All the files are created on Mac OS X 10.6.7 - so there can`t be a problem with a filename.
Is there another solution than corrupted harddisk?while the next error code -50, I looked into Console and kernel says: "BootCache: too many history clusters (151, limit 151)". So that`s the cause of error, but how can I manage with it?
I tried this one in Terminal
code:
/usr/sbin/BootCacheControl stop
but no success. "-BootCacheControl: could not stop cache: Operation not permitted"
any ideas? -
Simple UEFI GPT Dual boot with windows 8 boot partition question.
Hi everyone,
I think it's obvious from the quuestion that I'm a newbie here (and from the location of the post) but I have read (several times):
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/UEFI
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/UEFI_Bootloaders
and the incredibly helpful:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginner%27s_Guide
along with many forum posts. unfortunately this:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wi … _Dual_Boot
appears out of date and so I need to ask you fine people my question.
If I want to dual boot Arch with my Windows 8 my question is on the boot partition. I have an existing windows EFI boot partition. should I mount this partition to my "/mnt/boot/efi" folder and then copy the files to this partition when I am setting up rEFInd (my chosen bootloader from wiki page, comments/suggestions are welcome) or should I setup a separate boot partition for my arch installation. I assume from reading about rEFInd that the former is how I should do it as this seems to be how refind would be able to "see" my windows bootloader.
The reason I am double checking and asking here is I know that windows can be a temperamental beast and is very prone to not booting so I don't want to mess with the windows boot partition unduly.
Thanks in advance guys, looking forward to getting my arch working!
Last edited by crashandburn4 (2013-03-03 13:42:43)$esp = EFI System Partition?
also, ok, gummiboot, I'm glad I can mount the esp as /boot (that was my original thought but reread the tutorial and wasn't sure) just double checking, it is the esp created by windows 8 that I mount?
in addition, as I am slightly new to this is there any tutorial that can tell me how to set up gummiboot? I've looked here:
http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/gummiboot
but don't see anything in the way of detailed instructions.
from your post: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=159061
I'm gonna guess it's something like this (please let me know if this is right)
/mount $ESP /mnt/boot
pacman -S gummiboot
(after chrooting)
//exit chroot
gummiboot
*stuff saying gummiboot is not configured*
gummiboot install
is it something like that? can anyone point me towards a manual
Last edited by crashandburn4 (2013-03-03 14:58:53) -
How do I prevent the Lion boot partition from being reformatted when using boot camp?
Under Windows 7, Computer Mgt, I shrink the C drive to create another drive. When I right click on the unused drive to format it, 200MB Lion boot is formatted and assigned a drive letter F. But I did not tell Windows 7 Computer Management to do that. I clicked on the unused 170GB space to create it as F, I did not click on the 200MB Lion boot partition at the front of the list.
Now I have to take the computer back to the Apple store to reinstall Lion for me.
I tried this twice and it happened twice. So now I need to go back to the Apple store a second time for help on the same problem.
Would the 200MB Lion boot disk at the front be safe from reformatting if I first made it drive letter F, and then made the new drive letter H at the right side of the drive list in Computer Management? Also, there is an unlettered drive between the Lion drive E and the Windows 7 drive C. Should I make that G prior to formatting drive H?
By the way, I did this on another MacBook pro that was using Snow Leopard, following the same procedure, and had no problems. So could a different version of Boot Camp be the issue?I just found an older question similar to this one that you also replied to. It was from 2012 and never solved. The only things I am using in my set up is a male quarter inch cable from my guitar to my interface, a USB cable from my interface to my computer, and headphones from my interface to my ears of course. Just like in the other question I found I have everything in the Audio MIDI Setup of the computer set to use the interface as input and output and I also have everything in garage band setup to use the interface as audio input and output. Any new track is recording the metronome and any old track that is being played in the headphones. No external speakers are being used for monitoring and no microphones are being used.
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Is there a size limit for hard drive boot partition?
I have been using Drive Genius to adjust the size of my boot partition larger. But it doesn't seem to allow for much increase, even though I deleted the second partition and tried to apply the disk space to DH1: (boot - there is a single partition on the hard drive now.)
It recognizes only 59.53gb and the drive is I think around 130gb. Anything beyond 59.53 is unusable since I deleted that second partition though I could probably get it back with a second partition.
Is this a Tiger issue or a Mac issue? It resized it bigger somewhat, so it seems to be something about the particular size. I want a really big space for my applications and so on.
Thanks. Didn't know where to post this question.You don't want to make a disc image. You want to clone to an external drive:
How to Clone Using Restore Option of Disk Utility
1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
2. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list.
3. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (journaled, if available) and click on the Erase button. This step can be skipped if the destination has already been freshly erased.
4. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
5. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
6. Select the startup or source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
Once you finish the clone open Startup Disk and set the clone as your startup volume, then click on the Restart button. You should now boot from the clone. You can then repartition the internal hard drive the way you want, then clone the external drive to the internal one. -
OVM 3.2.1 / OEL 5.6 Template: How to resize the /boot partition
I need to enlarge the /boot partition from its default 100 MB to 300 MB for OEL 5.6.
I am using OVM_OL5U6_X86_64_PVM_10GB.tgz from Oracle edelivery.
Examining the modifyjeos manpage there is no function for extending and/or modifying /boot that I can locate unless it is an undocumented feature.
The way the disk partitions are laid out in the template make it very daunting as well with
/dev/xvda1 /boot
/dev/xvda2 /
/dev/xvda3 swamp
Perhaps there is an undocumented means via modifyjeos to change the partitioning layout ? or, even better, increase the size of /boot inside the template itself via modifyjeos or some other OVM 3.2.1 and.or OEL 5.X magic
Thanks
Mark E. LLoyd
Data Center Technology
AccentureIt's all explained very well, I'm using tftpd64, I keep getting an error from the switch that the tftp server is unreachable and no explanation why this is happening...
I'm using my computer's wired IP and the full filename, sx300_boot-13506.rfb, and I have the server interface as my computer's wired IP and tftp bound to my computer's wired IP, and no security.
I keep getting the error that the tftp server is unreachable:
Bytes Transferred:
0
Status:
Copy failed
Error Message:
TFTP server unreachable
The RAM memory log says things like:
2147483404
2014-Feb-04 17:04:57
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed
2147483405
2014-Feb-04 17:04:57
Notice
%TFTP-N-TIMERSEND: Session is closed after timeout is expired
2147483406
2014-Feb-04 17:03:42
Informational
%COPY-I-FILECPY: Files Copy - source URL tftp://172.16.0.90/sx300_boot-13506.rfb destination URL flash://BOOT
2147483407
2014-Feb-04 16:56:13
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed
2147483408
2014-Feb-04 16:56:13
Notice
%TFTP-N-TIMERSEND: Session is closed after timeout is expired
2147483409
2014-Feb-04 16:54:58
Informational
%COPY-I-FILECPY: Files Copy - source URL tftp://172.16.0.90/sx300_boot-13506.rfb destination URL flash://BOOT
2147483410
2014-Feb-04 16:51:58
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed, aggregated (1)
2147483411
2014-Feb-04 16:51:58
Notice
%TFTP-N-TIMERSEND: Session is closed after timeout is expired, aggregated (1)
2147483412
2014-Feb-04 16:50:43
Informational
%COPY-I-FILECPY: Files Copy - source URL tftp://172.16.0.90/sx300_boot-13506.rfb destination URL flash://BOOT, aggregated (1)
2147483413
2014-Feb-04 16:49:07
Warning
%COPY-W-TRAP: The copy operation has failed
How do I get tftp working properly??
Thank you, Tom -
Keyboard in a Windows boot partition.
I have a windows boot partition. Can I use my wireless keyboard in this environment? Is there a place to download drivers or whatever? Alternatively, is there a USB keyboard or whatever I can buy to work with my iMac in this partition environment?
Penguin555 wrote:
Penguin555 wrote:
where can I get windows 7 keyboard and mouse drivers for bootcamp?
I have installed Windows 7 in a boot camp partition. I can only use usb keyboard and mouse by booting Windows intyo safe mode, and I am totally unable to use my Apple wireless keyboard and mouse. How do I resolve this?
I'm running Lion - 10.7.2. Boot Camp Assistant fails to download drivers - that issue has been going on for some time, and has been reported by others as well.
But that answers your question. You get the drivers by using BCA to download them. Your inability to download the drivers is a separate issue than not being able to use your wireless keyboard.
While some people may have issues downloading the drivers, many others have successfully downloaded the drivers. I have downloaded them fine on several different Macs. It may take a long time, depending on the speed of your internet connection. Mine took over 3 hours.
Regardless, you need to download the drivers using Boot Camp Assistant. Try again, and if you still have problems, start a new thread and provide as much details as possible to describe what your seeing so that we don't have to go through this back-and-fourth, and you'll get your answer quicker. -
Screwed up MBR and boot partition, can't fix it [SOLVED]
Hi,
I have been defeated. Been trying to fix my computer the whole day and know I'm lost.
It's a long story, but my whole system got screwed when I tried installing windows on top of arch (I didn't get it to install, but I don't care anymore).
I was able to install GRUB2, I tried configuring it with grub.cfg , but when trying to boot it says it's missing kernel, boot partition has linux2.6, and I was using linux 3, I'm not really sure how to get the kernel I was using, should it be in my root partition? .
I'd like to get my system as it was before, I have root , var and home partitions and not sure how.
Thanks
Last edited by exuberant (2011-12-31 10:27:47)Thanks for your reply.
I was using Arch, I last updated a few days ago.
The kernel that's on the boot partition is from a debian live cd I had laying around.
It is not possible I have more than one boot partition. I have 1 hard drive, but plenty of free space.
Windows wanted to use the start of my disk, so I used gparted to move 20 gb free space at the beginning. Creating a partition in the beginning also caused all partitions numbers to move up (sda2->sda3), when I gave up on windows, I tried moving everything forward like it was before, but it didn't work. Then I remembered that when installing grub, installers check for other mount points, but that didn't work, and instead overwrote my boot partition. So know I've got a temporary debian system installed(sda9) and a boot partition that won't boot Arch.
This is my fdisk output: sda5 is arch sd6 var and sd7 home
Disk /dev/sda: 160.0 GB, 160041885696 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 19457 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk identifier: 0x00000080
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sda1 * 1 12 96358+ 83 Linux
/dev/sda2 13 401 3124642+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sda4 2744 14648 95619073 5 Extended
/dev/sda5 2744 4203 11719680 83 Linux
/dev/sda6 4239 5212 7815168 83 Linux
/dev/sda7 5227 10326 40957952 83 Linux
/dev/sda8 10393 13432 24411136 83 Linux
/dev/sda9 13432 14648 9764864 83 Linux -
Seeking to Modify the /boot partition size
I need to enlarge the /boot partition from its default 100 MB to 300 MB for OEL 5.6.
I am OVM_OL5U6_X86_64_PVM_10GB.tgz from Oracle edelivery.
Examining the modifyjeos manpage there is no function for extending and/or modifying /boot that I can locate unless it is an undocumented feature.
I have located a Brute Force Method (BFM) on the Internet for modifying /boot on a running OS image but I would rather modify the template if at all possible thank you.
Mark E. LLoyd
Data Center Technology
AccentureTarget DisK Mode may be your best bet.
Another alternative. Remove the hard drive. Buy one of these hard drive adapters. http://www.ebay.com/itm/USB-2-0-to-IDE-SATA-S-ATA-2-5-3-5-HD-HDD-Adapter-Cable-/ 180550148600?pt=US_Drive_Cables_dapters&hash=item2a09a0a1f8&_requireRaptorProxy= false Then connect the hard drive to another computer.
Cheers, Tom -
(SOLVED) Dualboot Windows + Arch Linux (Windows boot partition)
Hi,
I have 4 partitions.
sda1: Windows boot partition (ntfs) - This has always been there
sda2: Windows Installation
sda3: HP_Tools - I need to keep this for warranty
sda4: Arch Installation
I want to use GRUB to have a dualboot option at startup. Do I need to install GRUB to the boot partition which is NTFS, this should be ext3 according to the tutorial.
Or can I just install grub on the Arch installation in the /boot folder?
Thanks already!
Last edited by AlexCogn (2012-10-02 15:02:10)Scimmia wrote:
AlexCogn wrote:When I do that Windows just starts.
Then you didn't install grub to the MBR. Don't forget, installing the package isn't enough, you actually have to install grub to sda as a separate step.
So
# grub-install --target=i386-pc --recheck /dev/sda
# cp /usr/share/locale/en\@quot/LC_MESSAGES/grub.mo /boot/grub/locale/en.mo
and then
# grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
I forgot the installation ... I'm trying it in half an hour, thanks already for you help guys!
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