Reinstall grub for dual boot...

Hi all,
I've got Archlinux64 & WinVista64 installed as dual boot... but I'm going to have to re-install Vista again from fresh, so once it's all on again Vista will start to boot auto* 'cos it'll over written grub.
How do I install grub again... do I insert the Archlinux64 disc & ignore all the settings & just install grub?!
many TIA

if you manually mount your root partition on /mnt after booting from the arch install disc, going to setup and then choose to install grub should work I guess (not tested though )

Similar Messages

  • How to setup GRUB for dual booting OS X and arch?

    So I am reading the wiki, and there is a command I need to run, but for whatever reason I'm getting an error.  The command is,
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    and error I'm getting is,
    grub-mkstandalone: -C: (PROGRAM ERROR) Option should have been recognized!?
    Google searching the error yielded 2 results
    Last edited by ipatch (2014-05-22 18:35:32)

    Looks like the -C flag has been deprecated:
    claire ~ % grub-mkstandalone --help
    Usage: grub-mkstandalone [OPTION...] [OPTION] SOURCE...
    Generate a standalone image (containing all modules) in the selected format
    --compress[=no,xz,gz,lzo] compress GRUB files [optional]
    -d, --directory=DIR use images and modules under DIR
    [default=/usr/lib/grub/<platform>]
    --fonts=FONTS install FONTS [default=unicode]
    --install-modules=MODULES install only MODULES and their dependencies
    [default=all]
    -k, --pubkey=FILE embed FILE as public key for signature checking
    --locale-directory=DIR use translations under DIR
    [default=/usr/share/locale]
    --locales=LOCALES install only LOCALES [default=all]
    --modules=MODULES pre-load specified modules MODULES
    --themes=THEMES install THEMES [default=starfield]
    -v, --verbose print verbose messages.
    --core-compress=xz|none|auto
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    -o, --output=FILE save output in FILE [required]
    -O, --format=FILE generate an image in FORMAT
    available formats: i386-coreboot, i386-multiboot,
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    i386-ieee1275, i386-qemu, x86_64-efi, i386-xen,
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    powerpc-ieee1275, sparc64-ieee1275-raw,
    sparc64-ieee1275-cdcore, sparc64-ieee1275-aout,
    ia64-efi, mips-arc, mipsel-arc,
    mipsel-qemu_mips-elf, mips-qemu_mips-flash,
    mipsel-qemu_mips-flash, mips-qemu_mips-elf,
    arm-uboot, arm-efi, arm64-efi
    -?, --help give this help list
    --usage give a short usage message
    -V, --version print program version
    Mandatory or optional arguments to long options are also mandatory or optional
    for any corresponding short options.
    Graft point syntax (E.g. /boot/grub/grub.cfg=./grub.cfg) is accepted
    Report bugs to <[email protected]>.
    I couldn't find -C in the man-page either.

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    I've tried to install Wndows 7 on my macbook air for dual boot but got the kernal error on boot.
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  • How to add another operating system for Dual boot in Windows 7 boot configuration

    Hi,
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    Now i upgraded my Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit to Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit. But after fresh installation of Win 7 Ultimate my dual boot screen has gone and Win 7 is getting start directly.
    Now i want to add my Windows server 2008 again for dual boot which is still on D Drive.
    Can anyone please tell me how to add windows 2008 boot option in boot configuration to active my dual boot options.
    Thanks

    1) Using bcdedit.exe /enum
    To enable the computer to also boot Windows 7 you again use bcdedit.exe with the following command which will copy the current Windows
    Boot Loader details for Windows Server 2008 to Windows 7.
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    {current} /d "Microsoft Windows 7"
     bcdedit.exe will
    respond with something like the following.
    The
    entry was successfully copied to {................................}.
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    Before you can use the newly created Windows boot loader configuration, you'll need to change the partition for Windows 7 using
    the following two bcdedit.exe commands.
    bcdedit.exe /set {.................................} device partition=D:
    bcdedit.exe /set {.................................} osdevice partition=D:
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  • Help needed for Dual Booting purpose.

    If I want to install Windows 8.1 Enterprise and Windows Server 2012 R2 together for dual booting purpose, then which OS should be installed
    first to get a successful dual boot configuration.. Please help me regarding this matter..

    This one may help.
    http://blogs.technet.com/b/blainbar/archive/2012/09/25/step-by-step-4-ways-to-dual-boot-microsoft-windows-8-and-windows-server-2012-with-or-without-windows-7.aspx
    Regards, Dave Patrick ....
    Microsoft Certified Professional
    Microsoft MVP [Windows]
    Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties or guarantees , and confers no rights.

  • How to install Arch for dual-boot with Win 7 (on 2 hard drives)?

    Hello,
    the TLDR first: how exactly should I proceed when setting up GRUB for 2 hard drives to dual-boot Arch (64 bit)and Win 7 (64 bit)?
    Long version: So, I have the following hard drive & partition layout:
    On my first hard drive (250 GB big) I have: Win 7 64 bit, all the programs for Windows and of course the EFI partition
    My second hard drive is 1 TB big and formatted in NTFS and it only contains data. It has 2 partitions, one is about 750 GB big and used for simple storage.
    Sidenote 1: sometimes my disk management (Windows' own gparted) shows either the little disk or the big one as disk 0. Don't know what exactly this means, but I have never ever experienced any problems whatsoever during use.
    Sidenote 2: the UEFI motherboard (ASRock H67M) cannot boot into Legacy mode.
    I want to install Arch on a ~200 GB partition on the second hard drive (the one with 1 TB). (click here if you want to see a screenshot) I am posting this because I am confused with how exactly I should deal with the whole "2 hdds & UEFI" thing.
    So how exactly should I proceed when setting up GRUB for this setup?
    For partitioning I suppose I would have to use fdisk or cgdisk. I used cgdisk before and found it to be straightforward. Then, because I have experienced my fair share of problems with rEFInd, I'd like to use GRUB.
    Last edited by jones (2013-06-29 14:36:56)

    First thing you should do is become familiar with your motherboard.
    http://www.asrock.com/mb/manual.asp?Model=H67M
    This will probably help you out in understanding the sidenote 1 thingie (hdd's on sata3 and/or sata2 connectors)
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  • Best protocol for dual booting on a hardware RAID 0 array?

    Hi folks. I would like to dual boot Windows 7 and Arch. I'll append the specs. I have a Terrabyte to split evenly between the two drives - each is 500G. Unless someone can come up with a reason and convince me otherwise, I want to do away with the RAID array. There's no redundancy anyhow and the speed I would lose breaking the array is negligible, therefore irrelevant.
    My issue is that I have a RAID 0 hardware array with Intel Rapid Storage Technology as the controller. The computer did NOT come with a Windows disk, but rather a recovery partition. It is my understanding that if I break the array, I will lose the recovery partition and will not be able to reinstall Windows - which I need. IF....the recovery partition can be unphased by breaking the array and I can use it to reinstall Windows, I would prefer that since I may need to recover Windows in the future. It's not a deal breaker if I can't keep the recovery partition, since I have the Windows key.
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    6. Smoke stogie or alternatively weep because I turned my computer into a brick.
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    ==================================================================================
    Specs:
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    I think the big thing will be backing up. I don't know anything about the two programs you would use, but I know that if I dd copy the disks, I would have to change the size of the partitions to match the size of the new partitions. IE: I have Arch installed on a RAID0 of 32GB each, and if I wanted to break my RAID and install on just one disk, I would have to shrink the size of my dd'ed copy to match the smaller drive.
    Otherwise, it looks like you have the right idea, or at least the right direction.

  • How should I install GRUB to dual-boot 2 distros on two diff hd drves?

    Well, I actually have two questions.  I'm using the FTP install CD and noticed I don't have the Install Kernel Option after Configure System.  Does this mean that the kernel was installed when I did Configure System automatically?  Or that it wants me to run make && make modules_install manually?  I couldn't quite figure that one out. 
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    /dev/hda2 / for Gentoo
    /dev/hdb1 /usr/portage for Gentoo
    /dev/hdb2 / for arch
    So how should I go about installing the boot loader?   And I am assuming I would have to appropriately edit the lines of my grub.conf in Gentoo.... this is it currently...
    title=Gentoo Linux 2.6.23-r3
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    root (hd0,1)
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    So would I just add
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    to my Gentoo's grub.conf? Or am I just completely off here?  Then in addition to that what else would I have to do to get it to dual boot without overwriting my Gentoo's GRUB?    I'm just afraid I'll mess it up.
    PS: In Arch, all my hard drives are showing up as /dev/sda1, etc., not hda1, if that makes a difference.  :-p  I was like SCSI?  *blinks*  XDDDDD  But that's normal, right?  But I figured since it's Gentoo's GRUB I should use hd*
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    Last edited by violagirl23 (2008-01-30 04:12:20)

    tesjo wrote:
    Basically right but you should add
    title= Arch Linux
    root (hd1,1)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/hdb2 ro
    initrd /boot/kernel26.img
    Arch uses a newer library I forget the name, which identifies drives as sdX instead of hdX
    Well, I got it working.  Thanks!  Turns out this is what I needed:
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    kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sdb2 ro
    initrd /boot/kernel26.img
    I tried (sd1,1) and root=/dev/sdb2 at first but it barked at me for the (sd1,1), so I changed it back, and with root=/dev/sdb2 all seems to be well.  Thanks!

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  • Arch does not show up in Grub when dual booting with windows 8

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    Last edited by sutro_droid (2013-03-06 00:30:48)

    ivokosir wrote:It may be that you didn't install os-prober before running grub-mkconfig. This happened to me once, I hope I'm not too late to warn you.
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  • How to best partition the HDD for dual boot: Windows 8 & Linux

    Hi,
    I'm a newbie in Windows 8, linux, Partition....
    I would like to use my new laptop with windows 8 pre-installed to the following:
    Create a Dual Boot Windows 8 / Ubuntu
    Create on my C drive (unique drive on my laptop):
    *a partition for the system
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    According to you what's the best size for my partitions?
    Is there a better way to partition my C drive regarding my aim?
    Best Regards
    ***I don't know if it's the right section, sorry for that. Feel free to move this thread in the appropriate section***

    Hi,
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    See below the screenshot
    I've taken screenshot of my partition (below).
    * Don't take into account the disk 1 (E) partition
    Can u confirm that in Disk o, partitions with 450 Mo, 260 Mo and 9.48 Go are for recovery system?
    I am planning to let the recovery partition as it is and divide the TI30985500A (C) partition (688 Gb) into:
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    -100 Gb Linux partition
    -388 Gb data partition
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  • Satellite S55t-B5233 Shrink disk for dual boot windows 8 and other OS

    Hi,
    I have a Toshiba Satellite S55t-B5233 Pre-installed with Windows 8.1
    I would like to maintain Windows 8 but to dual boot with Windows 7, Ubuntu and OpenSuse, so:
    - When I try to Shrink disk C (943371 MB) it says that 'Size of available shrink space in MB = 469651 MB'. The free space in my disk is 885240 MB!
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    I don't recommend you attempt multiple-booting in this new UEFI/GPT world, Gari. Things are more difficult now than they were in the BIOS/MBR world. Best to set up virtual machines using Hyper-V or another free VM to run other OSes.
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  • Partitioning a disk for dual boot

    My system disk failed last week. The media just stopped holding a proper magnetic charge so I ended up with loads of bad blocks.
    The disk was 120 GB in size.
    I replaced it with a 500 GB model. But I didn't need the extra space for the system disk so I partitioned it into 2 drives (Mac OS Extended). The first one I set to 185 GB and the second one I made 300 GB. The rest of the space was lost due to rounding.
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    Gary

    Not all G4s supported drives greater than 128 GB:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2544
    http://lowendmac.com/2005/how-big-hard-drive-imac-emac-power-mac-powerbook-ibook /

  • [SOLVED]Proper Partitioning for Dual-boot

    I am attempting to dual-boot Windows XP and Arch, except I've left no free space...
    Do I have to reformat?
    Also, a question on windows. It uses 1 partition for everything, then allows you to create logical ones, right?
    Last edited by Haptic (2011-06-22 04:31:38)

    Haptic wrote:
    I am attempting to dual-boot Windows XP and Arch, except I've left no free space...
    Do I have to reformat?
    Also, a question on windows. It uses 1 partition for everything, then allows you to create logical ones, right?
    What Mardoct said about resizing w/ gparted is true, so unless you have the data backed-up, do it as your own risk.  Can you post a screenshot of a gparted map of your drive? 
    As you know, Win needs to be the first partition on the drive.  You are limited to four primary partitions, so if you want more, make three primary partitions, then the rest of the space an an extended partition.  Inside the extended partition, you can add many logical partitions.  I'd recommend doing all this from within gparted.
    My 1 TB drive example:
    /dev/sda1 (primary for windows), 20 gigs
    /dev/sda2 (primary for Arch), 20 gigs
    /dev/sda3 (backup of my Arch partition), 20 gigs
    /dev/sda4 (EXTENDED PARTITION), 873 gigs
    /dev/sda5 (logical for /home), 72 gigs
    /dev/sda6 (logical for /var), 8 gigs
    /dev/sda7 (logical for /boot), 0.11 gigs
    /dev/sda8 (logical for /data), 784 gigs
    /dev/sda9 (logical for swap), 8 gigs
    As a side note, you can also you gparted to copy/paste entire partitions which makes keeping backup very easy.  My /dev/sda3 is a periodic backup of my live Arch partition.
    Last edited by graysky (2009-09-16 11:15:29)

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