Dual boot , windows 7 keep restart after select from grub section

Hello everyone, i am new here.
I want to make a dual boot in my computer.
I am using a same hardisk to install both OS.
1st, I install arch linux , after install working well from grub.
2nd, I install windows 7, after install , it skip the grub section , directly load windows 7.
I boot my archlinux live cd.
Go to grub .
type root (hd0, and press tab to make sure my partition.
setup (hd0).
The grub section was recover and success to login arch linux.
but fail to login windows 7 , then i modify /boot/grub/menu.lst . modify the windows (hd0, 1).
My trouble probem is here, after i select the windows section , my com just like restart computer.
Even i try change to (hd0, 2 or 3 ) also same problem, windows 7 restart computer.

I have try to install dual boot for more than 5 time, first i install windows then only come to arch linux, but always fail to boot up windows.
Thank for helping me ^^
This is my fdisk -l
I have 2 hardisk, but i install both Os in the same hardisk.
Device Boot             Start                  End                  Block              ID              System
/dev/sdb1                   1                      24                    192742+            83              Linux
/dev/sdb2                   25                    37                   102400           7                    HPFS/NTFS
Partition 2 does not end on cylinder boundry
/dev/sdb3                   37                     8243              65939456           7                 HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sdb4                   8247                14593               50982277+            5             Extended
/dev/sdb5                  8247                  8368                  979933+            83             Linux
/dev/sdb6                  8364                 10858                20000893+             83          Linux
/dev/sdb7                  10859               14593                  20001356             82          Linux Swap / Solaris
# (0) Arch Linux
title Arch Linux
root (hd0,0)
kernel /vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sd5 ro
initrd /kernel26.img
# (1) Arch Linux
title Arch Linux fallback
root (hd0,0)
kernel /vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sd5 ro
initrd /kernel26_fallback.img
# (2) windows
title windows 7
rootnoverify (hd0, 1)
makeactive
chainloader +1

Similar Messages

  • Computer keeps restarting after installing windows 8

    Can you help my computer keeps restarting after I installed Windows 8?  I have the minidump file zipped

    We do need the actual DMP file as it contains the only record of the sequence of events leading up
    to the crash, what drivers were loaded, and what was responsible.
    You may be able to get the DMP files without crashing by booting into safe mode (F8) with networking.
    If you are overclocking stop.  (chances are if you dont know if you are, you are not)a
    To enable us to assist you with your computer's BSOD symptoms, upload the contents of your "\Windows\Minidump" folder.
    The procedure:
    * Copy the contents of \Windows\Minidump to another (temporary) location somewhere on your machine.
    * Zip up the copy.
    * Attach the ZIP archive to your post using the "paperclip" (file attachments) button. (if available on  your site, MS doesnt have this)
     *Please upload them to a file sharing service like Skydrive or"Rapidshare" and put a link to them in your reply.
    Link for how to  upload below.
    http://www.wikihow.com/Use-SkyDrive
    To ensure minidumps are enabled:
    * Go to Start, in the Search Box type: sysdm.cpl, press Enter.
    * Under the Advanced tab, click on the Startup and Recovery Settings... button.
    * Ensure that Automatically restart is unchecked.
    * Under the Write Debugging Information header select Small memory dump (256 kB) in the dropdown box (the 256kb varies).
    * Ensure that the Small Dump Directory is listed as %systemroot%\Minidump.
    * OK your way out.
    * Reboot if changes have been made.
    Please also run MSinfo32 and upload the output as well.
    To run MSinfo32 please go to start>run>MSinfo32
    Go to "file" "save" and upload the saved file with the DMPS
    (Instructions for XP, Vista, Win 7, Win 8)
    System specs are often useful so include whatever you know
    Dyami & Wanikiya ...Team ZigZag.

  • Finder froze, restarted. Now keeps restarting after boot.

    Hi!
    The title pretty says it all.
    Finder froze completly, and I forced a restart. After the restart it keeps restarting AFTER boot. By that I mean after getting into the desktop.
    Any ideas?
    Tried a few things my self, but it just keeps restarting..
    Got a Mac mini, can the macbook somehow boot from that? I just need the data from the harddrive!

    I could not find anything the direction I was going. OK, you can start from your DVD. What happens if you just click install? If you are able to install, then your would be installing Sno over Sno, as if doing an upgrade install, in an attempt to fix your Sno installation. In principle, your files, users, apps, and settings would not be affected. But,before trying this sort of install, you will need to resolve the issue of what sort of backup you have. Most importantly you may have important unbacked up files. If so, then you might be better off going to a data recovery specialist before trying to reinstall Sno over Sno.

  • Dual Boot, Windows doesn't boot.

    Hi there,
    Firstly, I'd like to apologize in advance if this has already been answered somewhere, but I couldn't seem to find it anywhere.
    Yesterday, I tried to dual boot Windows 7 on my iMac with the latest version of Lion. I used Bootcamp and everything went according to plan untill I had to install Windows. My Mac restarted and began to install Windows, but after a while of installing, the disc stopped running and everytime I heard it trying to get back running, it was stopped by a weird noise, as if something was grinding onto it.
    This kept going for a minute or two, when I decided to turn it off, since nothing was happening. After that, I started my Mac again and after a white screen, the only thing it shows is a black screen with a little type cursor in the upper left corner. I've tried to reboot it many times but I can't do anything, if I take the disc out, the only thing I get is a white screen, it doesn't go back to the normal Apple logo.
    If anyone has some tips on where i should go with this, it'd be greatly appreciated!

    You need to delete the boot camp partition and start over. Use Book Camp Utility or Disk Utility to remove the partition.
    What happened is when you installed Windows and it did not finish installing the OS and will keep trying to boot to that partition and finish. Until the OS install is finished the Mac is flagged to boot automatically to that partition. This is why you are seeing the black screen.

  • Dual boot windows mac mini

    I got a Mac mini and in general I'm happy with it but found out that there's some software I use regularly that is just much better on Windows.  They barely support OS X although technically they do.  So I would like to dual boot Windows as it seems like this is supported and not crazy.
    I followed the bootcamp and some guides I found via Google.  I have the mac mini 2014 with 8 gig ram and 1 terabyte of space.  I have dual monitors setup and a logitech mouse and a logitech gaming keyboard G110 - both USB.  (I also own a wireless apple keyboard which I occasionally use with my iPad).  My first problem was a DOS screen telling me I can't boot up on the specified disk but I did get some help off Google telling me to hold down option while booting (this should be in the guides ;p) but it was easy to fix.. however I'm stumped on what's happening now.
    When I click the Windows partition, it starts booting up Windows 7 Premium 64 bit setup and all looks good.  Then a screen pops up asking me what language/region I am.  The default is United states (perfect).  On this screen my keyboard and mouse are useless.  Or it's frozen.  I think the former.  I think the computer just can't recognize them.  And I cannot figure out a way around this.  If anyone can - please help I will be very thankful. 
    I've tried booting up using the Windows 7 DVD I own and an ISO installed on a USB flash drive per the Bootcamp installer.  Results are the same.

    Use Boot Camp!! Sounds like you have the install disc. Make sure you completely erase a USB 2.0 Thumb Drive format it as one MS DOS Master Boot Record partition. Download Drivers to it. I checked this box in boot camp only.
    Having install disc and driver thumb drive ready. Insert Windows install disc and plug in Thumb drive.
    Open Boot Camp uncheck first 2 boxes. Continue
    Size the BOOTCAMP partion you want it to be by sliding the bar. Or split your HD is an option.
    After that is complete. You will be asked where to install. Select BOOTCAMP partition
    Click Drive Options (advanced).  Click Format. Click OK. All goes well you click Next and it will format as NTFS
    Follow instructions to to install, set up and configure Windows.
    GO TO APPLE  SUPPORT no where else. PRINT BOOT CAMP Installation & Setup Guide. It is in my binder with my Windows 7 Professional Disc. You'll need this, I'm afraid, to have on hand. When Windows is up and going, Antivirus 1st, Install Windows express updates only. Do not update Apple drivers for Windows. Running Windows 7 Pro on my Mac Mini since I bought it in August. Use it for those outdated programs I can't run on Mac or Windows 8. Love it.
    GET THE MANUAL Please. Have fun with it.
    Oh, try left clicking your USB Mouse to make it work. If not use keyboard strokes. i.e. I  a ccept the license agreement (note that the a is underlined. hit "a" on the keyboard to check box.

  • Dual boot Windows 8.1 with Yosemite

    I'm attempting to dual boot Windows 8.1 on my parents iMac. I downloaded and successfully used Boot Camp 5 to partition the drive, giving the new section 50GB. I successfully installed Windows 8.1. Unfortunate now I cannot access the Yosemite partition. Boot Camp is not available in the Windows 8.1 I just installed, so the obvious option to use Boot Camp to reboot into OS X is not available. I tried downloading Boot Camp in Windows, but it won't install - error message indicates there is no location to install it to. I tried to restarting and holding the option key 12 separate times, it always boots into Windows without bringing up the any other option. I tried booting into safe mode and resting the PRAM several times, same outcome of booting into Windows; although Windows did not always boot it froze half the time. The idea was just be able to run some Windows games without purchasing another computer. Any ideas on what went wrong and how to fix it?

    You do not need the Boot Camp drivers on Windows in order to start up in OS X. However, note that the option to start up with the Option (Alt) key is more tricky in those computers with a Bluetooth keyboard, such as the iMac.
    In order to start up in OS X, you have to press the Option key since the startup sound has finished (if you do it before, your Mac will not recognize it) and hold it until you see all bootable partitions in the screen. Then, choose your OS X volume.
    If you could not install the Boot Camp drivers in Windows, open Boot Camp Assistant after starting up in OS X and follow its steps (you will need a USB drive to save your drivers). Finally, start up in Windows, access to your USB drive through Windows Explorer and run the installer.

  • Y500 dual boot windows 8 and fedora 19 problem

    I bought a y500 two days ago and i wanted to dual boot windows 8 and fedora 19, so here's what i did
    1. downloaded fedora 19 (x64) iso from the fedora website.
    2.made a live USB using live usb creator.
    4.opened disk management utility and shrunk the c drive (windows 8 was installed here) by 100 gb and kept the 100gb unallocated.
    3. started the laptop with novo button, changed the bios config to boot from usb.
    4.installed fedora from usb, selecting the 100gb unallocated memory for installation
    5.restarted the laptop.
    now the problem is fedora works perfectly but when i try to boot windows 8, the following error is shown.
    windows failed to start
    file:\BOOT\BCD
    status: 0xc0000225
    info:the boot configuration data for your PC is missing or contains errors.
    i am guessing the fedora installation overwrote the boot files of windows and
     i have not taken a backup. please help

    hi,
    I have a Y500 and I wanted to dualboot fedora 19 with windows 8, this proved to be unsuccessful. I had made a repair disk before the process (but not a set of recovery disks unfortunately >.<   ). now I inserted the repair disk and selected the automatic repair option, it showed a message that auto recovery has failed.  now when I pressed the NOVO button and selected the system recovery option, it does not go into the OKR menu but continues with the normal booting process.  Can somebody guide me or give links where I can find step by step instructions to making OKR work and reset my laptop to factory settings? PLEASE help As Soon As Possible
    NOTE: I did resize the windows 8 os partition but the recovery and the lenovo partition are still untouched

  • Dual boot Windows 7 and Arch from 2 seperate drives (UEFI)

    Hello everyone, I've been working on installing Arch to a secondary hard drive for the past few hours, but I am trying to make sure I won't mess up my Windows 7 install.  I have found several topics talking about dual booting Windows 7 and Arch, but not a whole lot on booting them from separate drives.  My drives are currently setup as follows.
    sda (120GB SSD for Windows 7)
        sda1 (100MB System Reserved NTFS partition)
        sda2 (Windows 7 install)
    sdb (1TB HDD for Windows programs, files, etc)
        sdb1 (1TB NTFS partition)
    sdc (1TB HDD)
        sdc1 (boot 512MB FAT32)
        sdc2 (root 500MB ext4)
        sdc3 (home 300GB ext4)
        sdc4 (swap 10GB)
        rest unallocated "free space"
    I used Gparted to create the partitions.  I ended up getting hung up on the "Create Filesystems" sections, specifically this line"
    # mkfs.fat -F32 /dev/sdXY
    Now that I am looking at it, I'm thinking the "Create Filesystems" section maybe isn't necessary because I've used Gparted?
    If it isn't necessary, when I get to the "mount the EFI System Partition to /boot" section, would I simply use
    # mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt/boot
    instead of
    # mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/boot ?
    The way I had this setup with Ubuntu was 3 partitions on sdc (/, home, swap) and I set my PC to boot to the sdc drive on startup.  The boot loader would then give me the option to boot into Ubuntu or Windows 7, and I never had to alter the sda or sdb drives at all.  Is this possible through Arch?  My thinking is that even if it isn't, I should still be able to enter the BIOS boot menu and select which drive to boot manually correct?  That wouldn't be too big of a deal for me because I spend 90% of my time in Linux, and only use Windows for Photoshop and gaming occasionally.
    Thanks for taking the time to read this.  I would have just tested this out, but I am afraid of messing up my Windows install.

    After several sleepless hours I had to give up and go to bed about 5 hours ago.  The installation process went smoothly (or so I thought).  I followed the tutorial closely and upon rebooting I was met with a blinking cursor.  After some googling I found others who said I should press TAB, but nothing seemed to work.
    I rebooted to the iso disk and found the "boot installed OS" option and noticed it said "Press TAB to edit".  I then found the boot parameters and tried everything from hd0 0 to hd4 4.  I believe I have Grub setup correctly because every option besides hd0 0 either says "Booting..." and then gets stuck, or says "That disk and partition combination does not exist".  So yea, I think hd0 0 is the correct boot path, it just gets stuck with the blinking cursor.
    silverhammermba wrote:
    You have the right idea. You want to install a bootloader on sdc1 which will be able to boot both Arch and Windows.
    Your best bet would be to use something like rEFInd. It has a "scanfor" option that should automatically detect your BIOS-configured Windows installation and add a boot option for it. Note that depending on your motherboard, you may have to switch to UEFI-only mode and Windows will be unbootable without the assistance of a UEFI program which is backwards compatible with BIOS (like rEFInd).
    Thank you for the link.  Considering I can't get into my install and the actual install only took about 30 minutes,  I think I am going to just start from the beginning again with REFIndr.  It seems much simpler.  I only used Grub because I've used it before with Ubuntu, but my very limited knowledge is telling me Grub is probably the problem.
    MoonSwan wrote:Just an idea:  My bios has a "Boot-up Prompt" which I can invoke when it's POSTing by hitting F11.  This brings me to a menu that allows me to choose which drive I want to boot up that day.  I use it when Syslinux isn't working properly (Which is right now as a matter of fact ...) in order to boot Windows so I can do some SCII, for example.  I, too, dual-boot but I have both OSes on different SSDs.  So my 120GB Crucial SSD has Arch on it and the 240GB Kingston has Windows, SCII, Portable Apps, etc and nary the two shall meet.  It makes dual-booting easier in the case of a corrupt OS or MBR or what-have-you.  You may want to give your Bios a better look to see if you can do the F11 trick.  It probably can and will usually tell you so at POST by printing that information on-screen along with your drives-detected and other messages (I hit Pause sometimes to read all the POST messages).
    This is exactly what I was talking about doing when I mentioned:
    My thinking is that even if it isn't, I should still be able to enter the BIOS boot menu and select which drive to boot manually correct?
    That's good to know, because even if this next install doesn't work I think if I pull the other drives I should be able to get it working fairly easily.
    Thanks again everyone.

  • Dual boot Windows 7 partition help

    I want to dual boot Windows 7 & arch but I need help with figuring out what partitions to make and where to put them because it seems the automatic partition-er won't do the trick for me.
    I have two drives that I want to completely format for a fresh, clean install: a 60GB SSD & a 750GB hard drive. I want the end result to be that the SSD only has Windows 7 Pro x64 SP1 installed to it and I will point the 'My Documents', 'My Pictures', etc. to a NTFS partition on the hard disk drive ( I know how to do this folder pointing ). I don't want arch to touch the SSD if possible so I can reformat the SSD separately if I ever just want to reformat Windows. I only want arch to be on the hard disk for that reason. I don't think I care which one handles the OS switching at boot ( should I favor Windows MBR or syslinux? Please give advice. ) And I would assume I make the NTFS partition on the hard disk a primary partition so how do I split up arch for the 3 other primary partitions left since the auto partition from the arch boot CD uses 4?

    I'm no expert, but the way I would do it would be like this:
    1. Create partitions on the HDD for /, /boot, /home and swap, along with one (or more) for your Windows personal files
    2. Set the BIOS to boot from the SSD.
    3. Install Windows on the SSD.
    4. Right-click the "My Documents" folder, select "properties", then the "Location" tab and choose the new location for the folder.
    5. Install Arch on the HDD partitions, and allow the boot manager to install itself in the MBR of the SSD.
    Then the whole boot process will be on the SSD...  If you ever need to get rid of the Linux bootloader, you can overwrite it with a "clean" Windows one using bootrec.exe (see here: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/927392).
    Last edited by esuhl (2012-03-26 04:52:12)

  • T440P Dual Boot Windows 8 with Centos 7

    So I have a T440p with Windows 8 installed. I have been trying to dual boot Centos 7 and also have attempted Centos 6.5. I have been using a bottable USB to perform the installation for both Centos 7 and 6.5.
    When I try the Centos 7 install, I set the boot priority to USB first on startup, and it goes to a screen that lists options to install, verify Centos 7 or troubleshoot. Upon selecting any of these options, everytime I get the error message:
    "alua: not attached"
    When attempting the Centos 6.5 Live DVD install, I try to boot into the Live mode, but it freezes in the process each time.
    I have heard about there being issues dual booting Windows 8 in UEFI mode with another Linux Distrobution.
    Has anyone here sucessfully dual-booted Centos or any other Linux Distrobution on a T440P?
    Any help/advice would be much appreciated.
    Thanks

    It's been many, many years since I don't do dual boot anymore. Don't find the reason to do it, either. Different kinds of virtualization should be enough. Anyway...
    dfw1417 wrote:
    It took over 2 days to figure out how to adjust the bios to get my win 7 pro DVD to boot and install dual boot on this GREAT MACHINE!!
    ENJOY! This is the BEST machine I ever had!
    WHICH machine?
    Cheers.
    If I helped you, please give me some kudos! ^^

  • Ipod touch 4th gen needed a new screen and sleep/wake switch.  So, I replace them.  I was able to get to settings and do "erase all content and settings".  I am not able to totally shut this device off as it keeps restarting after a few seconds.

    Ipod touch 4th gen needed a new screen and sleep/wake switch.  So, I replace them.  I was able to get to settings and do "erase all content and settings".  I am not able to totally shut this device off as it keeps restarting after a few seconds.  I have used itunes to restore and also recover.  Device will actually shut off and stay shut off if I leave it connected to the computer.  The moment I unplug (3 seconds) the apple logo appears, it boots, unlock screen appears, I can unlock and operate normally, unplugged or not.  Just cant get it to completely shut down unplugged.  Any thoughts?

    Try:
    - iOS: Not responding or does not turn on
    - Also try DFU mode after try recovery mode
    How to put iPod touch / iPhone into DFU mode « Karthik's scribblings
    - If not successful and you can't fully turn the iOS device fully off, let the battery fully drain. After charging for an least an hour try the above again.
    - Try on another computer                            
      - If still not successful that usually indicates a hardware problem. Maybe you installed a bad component or damaged something during the repair/replacement.
    Apple will not help since you worked on the iPod yourself.

  • How to dual boot window 8.1 64 bit with xp sp1?

    Hello Hp PC Experts,
    Sir i was bought HP 15-r119TU two week  ago. So i face problem of dual boot with this HP note book. I need dual boot  window 8.1 64 bit with XP SP1. Kindly help me at the earliest possible.

    @mp56 
    ‎Thank you for using HP Support Forum. I have brought your issue to the appropriate team within HP. They will likely request information from you in order to look up your case details or product serial number. Please look for a private message from an identified HP contact. Additionally, keep in mind not to publicly post ( serial numbers and case details).
    If you are unfamiliar with the Forum's private messaging please click here to learn more.
    Thank you,
    Omar
    I Work for HP

  • Dual Boot Windows 8 & 7 Help On HP Pavillion G9-1178CA

    Hello Guys I Just Need Some Help From You Guys So when I Try To Dual Boot Windows 7 & 8 it says that this partion is dynamic or something like that
    And i do not have ubuntu Dual booted so please help me thank
    -Sam

    Hi,
    To rebuilt boot loader, I suggest we can try following command when you enter Windows 8.1.
    Run cmd as administrator and type following command:
    BCDboot [Partition Letter with windows 7 installed]:\windows
    Note: if you installed Windows 7 on Partition F, the command can be write as: BCDboot F:\windows.
    Then, restart and boot into Windows 7.
    What’s going on?
    Kate Li
    TechNet Community Support

  • [SOLVED] Dual boot windows 7 and arch Linux with seperate hard drives

    Ok so I'm stuck trying to get my computer to dual boot windows 7 and arch. They are installed on different hard drives and I have grub 2 as the boot loader. I can't find any tutorials on how to do it with seperate hard drives I know how to do it if they are on the same hard drive. Also I want windows on the "first" hard drive how do I check to see which one it considers the first?
    Last edited by bdawg (2012-09-21 23:15:37)

    DSpider wrote:
    drobole wrote:If you want to change it so that sda becomes sdb and sdb becomes sda, you should be able to do that in BIOS.
    Not from the BIOS. He would need to physically open up the computer and switch the cables between them (or add another drive).
    There's no actual performance increase in changing this order. Performance increase is when you have the partitions as close to the beginning of a HDD as possible, where the platters spin faster (basic mechanics, not to be confused with CD/DVD, which are being written from the inside-out to prevent errors after extended usage), and it especially doesn't apply to SSDs whatsoever.
    You may be right about that. I remember I had to do this a while back but I probably switched the cables. It also messed up the drive mapping in Windows 98 if I remember correctly.

  • Dual booting Windows 8 and Arch Linux with UEFI

    Hi all!
    I'm trying to install Arch Linux on my computer where I already have Windows 8, and I'm getting a little stuck when it comes to the partitioning.
    Following the beginner's guide and the method here: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Un … n_in_Linux for setting up the partitions properly, regarding UEFI. My problem is that when using cgdisk to set up a new EFI system partition (ef00), I get an error message when trying to write the partition table (just saying that something went wrong). I figure the problem is that I already have a partition like this (correct me if I'm wrong), but it really looks like it succeded (see info below). So my question is: How do I preceed to keep my Windows 8 installation happy, but installing Arch? Do I remove the old EFI system partition and create a new one, or is there some method that allows me to edit the already existing one, to allow me to dual boot Windows 8 and Arch?
    My partition table now looks like this:
    Part. # Size Partition Type Partition Name
    1007KB free space
    1 500MB Windows RE Basic data partition
    2 300MB EFI System EFI system partition (this one was already present on my system)
    3 128MB Microsoft reserved Microsoft reserved partition
    4 63.5GB Microsoft basic data Basic data partition
    8 512MB EFI System EFI System partition (this is the one I tried to create when I got the error message)
    5 29.5GB Linux filesystem Arch (this is where I was going to put my Arch installation)
    6 22GB Windows RE Basic data partition
    7 1024MB Windows RE Basic data partition
    615KB free space
    Just for the record; I only created partition #8 and #5.
    Any help is appreciated! And sorry for beeing a total noob, but I really suck at this.

    sudo make sandwich wrote:If it is possible to share ESP between OSes, how do I do this (would it be sufficent to follow this section: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners'_Guide#For_UEFI_motherboards)?
    There's really very little to do to share an ESP between OSes. Most OS installers will auto-detect the ESP and use it. Problem solved. For Arch it may be a bit more effort just because Arch uses a more hands-on installation process, but I've only done a couple of Arch installations, and the last one was several months ago, so I don't recall the details clearly enough to comment.
    And how big will the partition need to be? The beginner's guide says 512MB or higher.
    I don't know what was in the mind of the author, but my guess is that's because that's roughly the cutoff point where mkdosfs starts creating FAT32 by default rather than FAT16. The ESP is officially supposed to be FAT32, not FAT16, although FAT16 usually works OK. It's also possible to create FAT32 on smaller partitions by using an explicit option to mkdosfs ("-F 32").
    The optimal size of the ESP depends on the files stored on it. If you don't store your Linux kernels, something as small as 100MiB is usually adequate; but a few Linux kernels and their initrd files can consume twice that amount. My own recommendation is for the ESP to be 200-500MiB.
    The only error message I got from cgdisk is "Problem saving data! Your partition table may be damaged!", however booting Windows again works fine. Parted did not complain about antything.
    Use the "verify" function in cgdisk. That will reveal any problems with the data structures. If a verify turns up OK, then that means that cgdisk ran into some sort of disk problem. Running gdisk rather than cgdisk and using the gdisk "w" option (without making any changes) may produce a more helpful error message.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Unable to be connected to Internet automatically

    I don't know why my device can not be connected to the Internet automatically even with a know wireless connection after my device turned on. This happened only when I turned on my iPod.

  • How do you retain links within a page when converting from Microsoft word from a Mac?

    Keeping Microsoft Word page links within a document or converting the filed map into bookmarks are not options when you work on a Mac. I subscribe to the Adobe Acrobat Plus  service specifically to address that issue. But I can't find any documentati

  • Initial View set with epilogue.ps when exporting pdf from Indesign

    Hi all. After years of Quarking, Freehanding, Pagemakering and my favourite, Indesigning, i finally got down to investigating a one step solution to setting the initial view in pdfs. When distributing pdf 'layouts' and 'proofs' to clients i always se

  • IPhoto 6 and Makernotes!!!!!

    I'm dying to know. Has iPhoto 6 fixed the ridiculous load times for those with the unfortunate luck of having cameras that create large makernotes!? Please tell me if you know! I can't wait to actually have a photo program that works the way it shoul

  • Permission problem in InDesign

    If we make a pdf from InDesign CS 6 to the desktop and then make a change and try to resave with the same name we get a warning telling us that it cannot save because we file is in use. And then we cannot throw it out from the desktop.