Dual boot ArchLinux and Windows 7

I've installed windows 7 on first partition of  the disk.
Afterwards, I've installed Linux (GPT, RAID1, LVM, Syslinux) on the disk with problems but resolved now.
At the boot when Windows is choosen, a screen appeared with :
Windows failed to start. A recent hardware or software change might be cause.
File \boot\BCD
Status : 0xc000000e
Info: An error occured while attempting to read the boot configuration dt
The syslinux.file contains :
LABEL windows
        MENU LABEL Windows
        COM32 chain.c32
        APPEND hd0 1
I've tried also withous success.
LABEL windows
        MENU LABEL Windows
        KERNEL chain.c32
        APPEND hd0 1
I've read on the net that Windows is not compatible with GPT disk. Is there any workaround ?

Jo wrote:I've read on the net that Windows is not compatible with GPT disk. Is there any workaround ?
Not really.
You have two (three) choices. Either you change back to good old MBR. or you use use UEFI instead of bios and be happy with windows and GPT after a reinstall of windows. If you don't have UEFI, have fun with the setup of DUET
Last edited by progandy (2012-08-29 12:14:51)

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    So I have been trying to get Starcraft II to work with wine and no luck.
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    If someone with past experience with dual booting windows and arch could please give me some advice, as I do not want to lose all my data, start over, and have another headache.
    I know I must learn to backup arch, which I will before september.
    But if anyone has any protips, or sees a flaw in my plan please point it out!!!
    Thank you very much for taking the time to read this and even more if advice has been given to boost my confidence!
    For now I will wait
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    Last edited by Jabrick (2011-07-03 01:29:36)

    satanselbow wrote:
    1) Windows must be installed to a primary partition - attempting to install it to an logical partition will result in an epic fail
    2) Physically disconnect the harddrive you do not want windows on as windows typically installs the bootloader on the 1st hardisk (ie /sda) regardless of installation drive (ie /sdb)
    3 / 4) Complete the windows installation then reattached your Arch drive and edit /boot/grub/menu.lst (as root) pointing the W7 entry to (hd1,0) - no need to reinstall grub
    5) Hey it's windows - anything could happen
    If you create an NTFS partition right at the beginning of the the drive before you start the W7 install you can prevent it greedily using up 2 of you 4 primary partitions - I would also completely update you new W7 installation past SP1 before reattaching the other drive to further prevent W7 going mental
    satanselbow thank you so much!
    Everything works great I had no stumbles, and I hope no problems in the future!!
    I will post exactly what I did in case someone has the same issue.
    1. Partition you're secondary harddrive as primary ntfs with gparted
    2. Reboot, and if you get a file system check error, check you're udev rules. (For my case in particular I had to change the udev rules I got for auto mounting usb, ext harddrive, etc.
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    4. Plug in your windows cd and install in the partition you created
    5. Update your windows OS
    6. Plug in Ubuntu live CD and reboot
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    8. Reboot and see if grub loads up
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    Once again shout outs to satanselbow!!! For without him I might've failed brutally!
    Cheers!

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  • Dual Boot Arch and Windows 8 from Windows Boot

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  • Dual boot archlinux and "live"OS

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    Last edited by alexandrite (2010-08-24 14:24:39)

  • How to Dual boot Ubuntu and Windows 8 on X1 Carbon G2?

    I currently have a Windows 8.1 64 bit installation on my carbon x1 and need to install ubuntu.
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  • How to dual boot ubuntu and windows 8?

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    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    Thanks, I can boot into the Ubuntu now
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  • How to set time in Dual-boot config with Windows 8.1

    Hi,
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    I have two laptops which are dual booted arch and Windows 8.1.  For both of those machines I set the Windows clock to be UTC instead of local using the method in https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Ti … in_Windows (i.e. creating the .reg file and executing it - take care that the .reg file is created correctly with the .reg extension or it won't execute).  I still allow Windows 8.1 to update its time from the network and it does not cause a problem, though the advice is to let Arch do the time synchronisation. (That may be because it is not yet summertime so I will also disable time sync in Windows before the change to summertime at the end of this month). I also followed the normal install advice for Arch and have the hardware clock in UTC, and have chrony set up to keep time in sync.  Additionally I use KDE and have my normal timezone with DST adjustments for summertime.  I have not had any problem with that way of working on either of my two machines.
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    Last edited by mcloaked (2014-03-21 10:46:04)

  • Dual boot with archlinux and windows issue

    Hi again!
    This is what i did from the beginning :
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    Last edited by shak (2009-03-27 20:20:30)

    yes i only have one hard rive , i managed to find a solution not that elegant though , i 've installed acronis os selector from windows and i can choose between windows and linux with acronis on boot . If i choose linux i get to the grub menu and i can choose between arch linux and windows . So it seems that the grub menu is still there but it doesn't appear when i boot for some reason .
    Last edited by shak (2009-03-27 20:34:40)

  • Dual booting Arch and Ubuntu

    Hi, I would like to dual boot Arch and Ubuntu using GRUB2.
    I already have Arch, set up as it's described in the Beginner's Guide, with GRUB2 installed. How would I go about dual booting Ubuntu, preferably without overwriting the existing bootloader?
    I haven't tried anything yet, but the problem that I can see is resizing my /home; is this possible on the Ubuntu liveDVD? If not, would I be able to resize /home with my gParted liveCD?
    Unfortunately, I have no backup media to use, so I wouldn't be able to transfer anything away as a backup.
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    %lsblk
    NAME   MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE       RO TYPE      MOUNTPOINT
    sda      8:0       0        931.5G   0    disk
    ├─sda1   8:1    0        30G        0    part       /
    ├─sda2   8:2    0        12G        0    part       [SWAP]
    ├─sda3   8:3    0        5M          0    part
    └─sda4   8:4    0        889.5G   0    part       /home
    sda1 is my root partition, sda2 is swap, sda3 is GRUB's boot partition, which I was told that I needed in the guide, and sda4 (/home) occupies the "rest of the disk".
    I am using a GPT-partitioned drive, as I read this has many advantages and I do not plan to triple-boot Windows.
    So, can someone tell me what I do if I want to dual boot Ubuntu? I'm very sorry if this should have been posted on the Ubuntu forums, but I'm just more familiar with Arch, and I already have it installed. Please ask if you need any other files like my fstab. I have my Ubuntu liveDVD, GParted live CD (and Arch CD) at hand.
    Thanks in advance, rberyl.
    (Also, does anyone else think it's a bit of a backwards thing to put the output of "date -u +%W$(uname)|sha256sum|sed 's/\W//g'" as a sign-up question? )
    Last edited by rberyl (2012-12-29 11:45:23)

    Hi rberyl,
    You can change your partitions using an inbuilt tool like cfdisk, or if you'd prefer a GUI gparted can be installed from the Arch repos. This will allow you to shrink sda4, and set up the new partitions for your Ubuntu OS. Although this shouldn't cause any data loss, its best practice to back up just in case.
    When installing Ubuntu, be sure to opt-out of bootloader creation. I think you have to use the alternate installation media to get this option. You can add your Ubuntu partition to the existing bootloader by running osprober (available from the repos) and then running grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg . Alternatively, you can manually edit your GRUB config. See https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GR … NU.2FLinux for instructions.
    Good luck!
    Last edited by smazza (2012-12-29 16:04:08)

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