Solaris 8 dual boot with win2k

do i need to create 2 primary partition disks or can place either one on a logical partition on an extended dos partition?
if i do need to create 2 primary partitions.. how do i do it??

http://math.uwb.edu.pl/~mariusz/dualboot/

Similar Messages

  • New to Solaris - dual boot question

    I have been using OpenSolaris on my ThinkPad T400s, dual booting with Windows 7. I want to give Solaris 10 a try. I've had it running in Virtual Box under OS X for a while, and I think I'm comfortable enough to try it out on my ThinkPad. Here is my question: will the Solaris Interactive installer let me install Solaris 10 in my existing OpenSolaris partition? And if it does, will it modify the bootloader so that I can still dual boot with Windows 7? I dont want to have to destroy partitions and re-install Windows. Once its on my hard drive, I can add myself as a user, install the Intel 5300 wireless driver, etc... Anyone have any other issues with Solaris 10 on a T400s?

    Okay, well as usually happens, when I resort to help I end up solving my own problem.
    In this case however, I still don't have a good grasp of what is going on.
    I deleted the partition table with sgdisk --zap-all /dev/sda and then used gdisk to recreate it, specifically setting the code for /dev/sda1 to ef00.
    I then reformatted the FAT partition, leaving the other one alone. After mounting /dev/sda1 to /boot and reinstalling linux and grub, I ran:
    grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=$esp --bootloader-id=arch_grub --recheck
    as described in the wiki, and
    grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
    And it worked, including automatically detecting Windows on the other drive. Not sure what went wrong the first time but I'm glad to get it working.
    Last edited by egan (2014-12-09 19:46:58)

  • Dual Boot with Windows ME

    i am very new to all this stuff. Can someone please guide me on how to go about installing Unix so that it also dual boots with windows ME.
    i am planning on doing some unix work..and installing oracle and learning oracle in the bargain at home. do u think this is the best way to go. any suggestions/guidance is appreciated.
    many many thanks

    I'd consider buying a second, inexpensive PC for Solaris. You can get a $20 mechanical switch that will let you share a single monitor. If two keyboards and mice are inconvenient, you can buy a KVM (keyboard-video-mouse) switch. If you just want to hack around, it's much more convenient to have two PCs. (IMHO)

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

    I just installed Arch linux, dual booting with windows 8 using the beginners guide[https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners'_Guide] itself. Now Grub is installed and i can only find Windows 8 and I cannot find Arch. Is there a way I can find if arch linux has been installed and show up in Grub.
    Sorry, I am a newbie, but i chose to post this topic here and not newbie corner as it is installation related.
    My windows 8 is installed on /dev/sda1 with ntfs partition type. Arch Linux is installed on /dev/sda6 and it is ext4 partition. I dont know if this info helps.  I am using Thinkpad R61
    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.
    I am sorry, yes you are too late. I have wiped windows 8 and performed clean install. No regrets. And as a matter of fact, I did grub-config and then installed os-prober. That could be the problem. Thanks. I will try this again another time.

  • [SOLVED] RTC and dual booting with Windows 8/8.1

    I am planning ahead of installing Arch on a windows 8.1 laptop, and need to understand whether or not the known Windows registry hack to get windows to use UTC for the RTC is still valid for Windows 8/8.1?  I have been searching via google and the usual sources of information, but it is not clear to me if there are problems doing this, specifically if arch is dual booted with Windows 8/8.1 rather than older versions of the MS OS. Certainly I have used the technique without any problem in the past when dual booting Windows XP with Arch on several different machines.
    Does anyone have personal experience with doing this on a Windows 8 or 8.1 machine and can report here on whether it works successfully or not?
    Thanks for any advice.
    Last edited by mcloaked (2014-02-11 21:16:21)

    Since there were no replies at this point I thought I would just go ahead and implement the registry hack on the Windows 8.1 O/S in the laptop and see if Windows behaves.  It appears to be OK, with the displayed time being correct after reboot, and time synchronisation remaining fine with no problems seen in the displayed time, although I won't be able to read the RTC directly until I have completed the Arch install in the coming week or two.  I now don't foresee any issues with the time synchronisation between booting Arch and Windows 8.1 so I will mark this as solved.
    Since the RTC is now in UTC then normal clock config in Arch using chrony should perform normally once the install is done and the new system set up.
    Last edited by mcloaked (2014-02-11 21:17:11)

  • Dual boot with Ubuntu 13.0 using bootable USB problem (Y410P)

    Hi I recently bought Lenovo Y410P and have been since trying for hours to dual boot with Ubuntu but I was unsuccessful.
    I formatted by USB drive in FAT format, and created a bootable usb using Pendrive. Then I changed the Boot Mode to Legacy Support and the boot order so it boots from the flash storage first.
    Then it hung on a purple screen like this: http://img829.imageshack.us/img829/3509/dgfdgrunningoraclevmvir.png
    and the keyboard doesn't work and I couldn't go any further from here.
    So I tried to use a different program called Unetbootin, and the problem got worse and it just stopped working at the option screen where you select whether to just try Ubuntu or install it, etc.
    I read it somewhere the recent version of Unetbootin doesn't work, so I got the 474 version of it, and finally I was able to select from the option menu and it didn't hang. However when I clicked on Install Ubuntu, it just stopped there for a while, and then the boot failed and moved onto Windows 8 again.
    I looked at the USB drive, and I realized the folder and some config files are names isolinux instead of syslinux, so I changed them, and now I'm getting the "SYSLINUX 3.86 2010..." words on the black screen and it hangs there.
    I saw a similar message before using Pendrive and it was like "SYSLINUX 4.10 2012...". That was because the flash drive wasn't formatted in FAT (it was FAT32). So I re-checked the drive, but it is indeed formatted in FAT so I'm not sure why now I'm getting a similar message.
    It will be much appreciated if you could give me some suggestions as to how to solve this problem.
    Thanks

    Something else you could try.  Not sure it will make any difference.
    Skip the boot creation tools and just boot the thing in UEFI mode.
    Use the latest (12.10 or later will work, IIRC) 64-bit Ubuntu ISO.  Format your flash drive as a single FAT32 partition.  Extract the contents of the ISO to the flash drive.  Use 7zip for Windows, or your favorite Linux de-archiving tool.  That's it.  
    [edit] I don't believe the partition needs to be set active, but haven't tested that.
    Set BIOS boot mode to UEFI.  Even secure boot mode should work withe a new enough Ubuntu - but isn't necessary.
    Give that a try.  If it still barfs at the same place, mess around with the start-up graphics options.
    Z.
    The large print: please read the Community Participation Rules before posting. Include as much information as possible: model, machine type, operating system, and a descriptive subject line. Do not include personal information: serial number, telephone number, email address, etc.  The fine print: I do not work for, nor do I speak for Lenovo. Unsolicited private messages will be ignored. ... GeezBlog
    English Community   Deutsche Community   Comunidad en Español   Русскоязычное Сообщество

  • Help - How to install Win XP in dual boot with Win 7 (first installed)?

    Hi everybody!
    I'm having some difficult in install a win xp in dual boot with win 7 (which came with the G550 notebook).
    I modified the D: (Lenovo) partition to a primary partition to install the XP.  Also I installed the EasyBCD to manange the boots and both S.O. load fine. 
    The problem is that Win XP is seeing a partition (the first partition on disk) with 200MB that is hidden for Win 7 !   So this partition takes the C: letter in XP and mess all the configuration once that many programs uses the C: as a default letter. 
    The disk is divided in (aprox):
    200 MB hidden partition (from factory)
    160GB with Win 7 installed
    40GB with Win XP installed
    19GB hidden partition (Recovery - from factory)
    Is anyone has some idea who to solve this problem or make install XP from the beginning without problems?
    Thank a lot! 

    jay4baps wrote:
    Are you sure VMWare Fusion 6 is Launched???  give me link then i download it...
    It's version 3.1

  • (Grub) Dual booting with XP on sdb

    My goal is to be able to dual boot with two hard drives: Arch on sda and Windows XP on sdb.  With help in the #archlinux IRC I've managed to get Windows XP to boot by getting the menu.lst correct but when I click "Start Windows Normally", or "Start in Safe Mode", etc. etc. the computer just reboots. A cellphone picture of that all well known Windows black Screen: https://www.dropbox.com/s/nrczq86vsi6o9 … 6%20AM.jpg
    My fdisk -l and /boot/grub/menu.lst:
    http://pastebin.com/sLUUsCcU
    To see if my xp hard drive was still intact I did this:
    sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /media && ls /media/
    and saw this:
    boot.ini NTDETECT.COM pagefile.sys System Volume Information
    Documents and Settings ntldr Program Files WINDOWS
    nano /media/boot.ini
    [Boot Loader]
    Timeout=30
    Default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS
    [Operating Systems]
    multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows" /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
    I've consulted all the wiki's and forum posts I could find but at this point, I'm just stuck.  Somehow I think the final result is me reinstalling both OSs and starting again from scratch.
    Any help or advice on getting a fully functional Windows XP on /dev/sdb would be greatly appreciated

    Pres,
    Thanks for the post.  If I click "Last Known Configuration" the computer just reboots and I'm back where I started. Yeah, my Arch is working fine. My thought process behind re-installing Arch was that maybe the installation process would deal with the Grub config of /dev/sda and /dev/sdb automatically somehow and make everything OK...

  • Dual-booting with other Linuxes; shared data partition

    I've got two entirely-blank 320GB hard drives on my computer, and I'd like to dual-boot Arch and Debian on it (and potentially others later). How should I set up GRUB (or GRUB2-- the wiki says that it's a better option when dual booting with other distros) for each OS in order to have both of them able to boot, as well as retaining the capability of adding other distros? (Assuming that Arch's GRUB(2), not Debian's, will be installed to the MBR.)
    In addition, I'd like to keep my config files and data separate (with a shared data partition on HD 2).
    - What is the best way to set this up separately from the /home partition, i.e. mount /data on startup and be able to access it quickly from a filemanager or the commandline? I venture a guess that I'd edit /etc/fstab and add a symlink to /data within /home/USERNAME...
    - What is the right size for the /home partition in this setup?
    A tentative partition scheme is as follows (note that I have 4GB RAM, since that factors into swap size):
    HD 1
      4GB shared swap partition
      256MB ext3 Arch /boot partition
      20GB ext4 Arch / partition
      ? ext4 Arch /home partition *see note above*
      256MB ext3 Debian /boot partition
      20GB ext4 Debian / partition
      ? ext4 Debian /home partition *see note above*
      (free space)
    HD 2
      320GB shared ext4 data partition
    Last edited by DrKillPatient (2012-06-20 18:38:01)

    Most of it is a matter of opinion I think, but since I have a similar setup I'll throw in my two cents.
    DrKillPatient wrote:I've got two entirely-blank 320GB hard drives on my computer, and I'd like to dual-boot Arch and Debian on it (and potentially others later). How should I set up GRUB (or GRUB2-- the wiki says that it's a better option when dual booting with other distros) for each OS in order to have both of them able to boot, as well as retaining the capability of adding other distros? (Assuming that Arch's GRUB(2), not Debian's, will be installed to the MBR.)
    I use GRUB (legacy). Adding a distro in the grub menu is just a matter of finding the kernel and initram image of the distro and adding an entry. OS's generally either have a fixed location/name for the kernel and image or have a fixed link, so there are no problems on updates. I really don't like GRUB 2 and don't see the point of using it unless you are using something exotic that GRUB doesn't support.
    DrKillPatient wrote:I
    In addition, I'd like to keep my config files and data separate (with a shared data partition on HD 2).
    - What is the best way to set this up separately from the /home partition, i.e. mount /data on startup and be able to access it quickly from a filemanager or the commandline? I venture a guess that I'd edit /etc/fstab and add a symlink to /data within /home/USERNAME...
    - What is the right size for the /home partition in this setup?
    I just mount the data partition in /mnt/data and make symlinks from my home partition. In my case the data partition is ntfs, since I also use windows. My home partition contains 1.2 GB, of which 600 MB source code. So if you only keep configs in them it probably won't reach 1 GB.
    DrKillPatient wrote:
    I
    A tentative partition scheme is as follows (note that I have 4GB RAM, since that factors into swap size):
    HD 1
      4GB shared swap partition
      256MB ext3 Arch /boot partition
      20GB ext4 Arch / partition
      ? ext4 Arch /home partition *see note above*
      256MB ext3 Debian /boot partition
      20GB ext4 Debian / partition
      ? ext4 Debian /home partition *see note above*
      (free space)
    HD 2
      320GB shared ext4 data partition
    In my opinion a seperate boot partition is only useful for the OS of which the bootloader is installed to the MBR.

  • I Would Like To Dual Boot With Nitroid

    OK have got my phone where I want it - have installed all the speed enhancers after updating to PR 1.3 and am overclocking at 1150Ghz.  It fairly zips along now
    I have read how to install using the Auto Installer but am a little confused.  Could someone answer these questions please: -
    1.  Will using the Auto Installer itself, allow you to dual boot automatically or must you install a spearate dual boot prog of some sort first?
    2.  If the Auto Installer does allow dual boot with your existing Maemo 5 OS, will it automatically place it on the separate SD Card? (mine is a 16Gb one).  I also assume it will completely reformat the SD Card, is that correct?  I am reluctant to proceed if it wipes the existing OS first etc.
    3.  I am confused with the options for Overclocking.  I understand you can continue to Overclock Maemo 5 but can you Overclock Nitroid, once installed?  If sow how?
    4.  I gather that overclocking defaults back to 650 either on reboot or on receiving an incoming call - is that correct or has it been fixed?  And do these limitations apply when in Nitroid?
    I would appreciate someone who has successfully ported this OS to their N900 and is dual-booting, to explain the current procedures and answer my questions - pointing me to the relevant resources as appropriate.  Any tips too would be appreciated, given we now have PR 1.3.
    Thanks in anticipation of your help and advices
    Paul

    Cheers Montana.
    As you guessed, I used the 0.0.7 "Installer" because the version 0.0.8 refused to partition my SDHC Card - version 0.0.7 worked
    However because it is an "Installer", I assumed it would install the most up to date version of Nitdroid on my phone.  I am confused because I don't know which version I have.
    At the moment Nitdroid is working ok, I have the correct multiboot and power boot kenels installed and can overclock in Mawmo as before - the multibooting giving me 3 options here to boot into Maemo without oc, to boot into Maemo with oc and to boot into Nitdroid.
    HOWEVER I simply cannot connect to my WiFi - it authenticates then disconnects, it tries again several times before giving up and leaving me disconnected
    I did have the Aipplane Mode problem but after tinkering around, I am free from this now and it is deactivated and the mobile network symbol shows up as "active".  I have not set up an APN yet - not sure I have to as yet given that you cannot make (and receive?) voice calls but for the life of me, I have tried everything to connect my WiFi but am failing miserably
    Ok this is the plan and maybe you can help please? : -
    1.  Find out what version of Nitdroid I have installed right now.  I am aware that WiFi was activated from version 0.0.8 so if my Nitdroid is older than this then maybe this is my problem?  Are the Installer versions and Nitdroid versions one and the same thing?  FYI I can activate Bluetooth as these options are not greyed out - this tells me that perhaps I have the most recent version installed, unless this was activated from version 7?
    2.  Assuming that I have an older version of Nitdroid installed - I need step by step instructions as to how to UNINSTALL my current version of Nitdroid whilst leaving the Power and Multibooting options as they are and WITHOUT destroying the current SDHC Card's partitioning.
    3.  Finally I need to know exactly how to INSTALL the most recent version of Nitdroid
    I am so near yet so far with Nitdroid and all the problems I have experienced have been sorted resulting in a massive learning curve and leaving me with the impression that my N900 is such a cool piece of kit.
    Now if only I could go to the "Market".........
    I have registered on the Nitdroid Forums but prefer to stay here for now as they are baffling me with science in terms of the lingo they speak lol!  You guys make things sound straight forward
    TIA
    Paul

  • [SOLVED] Dual boot with ubuntu w/o installing GRUB? (YES)

    Hi all -
    This is my first shot at arch, tho I've installed a few other linux distros.
    So far I really appreciate the excellent documentation, especially compared to other linuxes!
    But I can't find a good answer to this question:
    I already have ubuntu installed and would like to dual-boot with arch.  (I also have Win7 but boot it from a separate disk selected via BIOS, and usually leave this disk disconnected anyway, so it's not an issue; grub doesn't know it exists).
    Q:  Before installing, can I make a new LOGICAL ext4 partition (say /dev/sda7),
    - then install arch on that **w/o installing grub** and **without messing with the MBR**,
    - then edit ubuntu's existing menu.lst to add arch to the boot options?
    Current $ fdisk -l
    /dev/sda1    ext4 primary/boot (/ for ubuntu)
    /dev/sda2    extended
    --/dev/sda6  linux-swap
    --/dev/sda5  NTFS (data - mp3s, etc)
    unallocated  480GB  --> Create new ext4 partition /dev/sda7,  (logical or primary? Prefer logical)
    Current menu.lst entry that I normally boot:
    title       Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, kernel 3.2.0-24-generic REGULAR
    uuid        UUIDforSDA1 (file has actual UUID number...)
    kernel      /boot/vmlinuz-3.2.0-24-generic root=UUID=UUIDforSDA1 ro
    initrd      /boot/initrd.img-3.2.0-24-generic
    and add something like this to menu.lst:
    title  Arch Linux
    uuid  UUIDforSDA7
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz-linux root=/dev/sda7/ARCH ro  (??? - from example in arch docs)
    initrd /boot/initramfs-linux.img
    or
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz-linux root=UUID=UUIDforSDA7 ro  (??? - like the ubuntu entry)
    I'd really like to NOT mess up booting ubuntu!  (Another option might be install arch to a separate disk with the ubuntu disk disconnected, then copy the whole install over via a USB adapter...I've done worse!)
    TIA for any help!
    Edit: so I guess there's three questions:
    1 - Can I install arch w/o installing grub & MBR messing-wth?
    2 - What's the correct syntax for menu.lst to access and boot arch?
    3 - Will this work?
    Last edited by Flemur (2012-05-25 15:24:18)

    Well, it worked and booted up first time - no grub install.
    The main hassle was merely creating a new ext4 partitions because "Partition Wizard" boot CD screwed up and I kept getting "Unable to update kernel until reboot" messages until I deleted and rebuilt all the partitions in the extended partition with puppy linux & gparted instead of Partition Wizard.
    In case others stumble upon this trhread, here's some info:
    The entry in the ubuntu (original) menu.lst was this:
       title           Arch Linux
       uuid          af7...etc...9f3c
       kernel        /boot/vmlinuz-linux root=UUID=af7...etc.f3c ro
       initrd          /boot/initramfs-linux.img
    I'm even posting this from arch/fluxbox/Firefox, although getting X set up with nvidia (PITA!) apparently required using a different pacman source:
    File "mirrorlist" now points to
        Server = http://mirror.us.leaseweb.net/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
    which wasn't in the original file.
    Then
    $ pacman -Su --> "/etc/mtab exists" --> delete it and something else broke,
    so
    $ pacman -Su --force --> worked fine (against official advice)
    Also: needed to install nvidia-utils and xorg-xinit
    Thanks again!

  • Dual Boot with OS X

    Not quite sure where this should be posted, so I figured I'd post here.  I came upon a rather large hard drive and I was thinking about dual booting with OS X.  I meet the system requirements, but I'm not sure how easy it would be to integrate.  I did some searching on the forums here, and on google, but I wasn't able to find much.  I guess my main questions are:
    1) Can GRUB load OS X from an external USB hard drive?
    2) Is it possible to mount ext3 partitions from OS X?
    3) Is there any common pitfalls I should be aware of before starting this?
    Any help I can be given would be greatly appreciated!
    David

    1: Probably. OSX refusing to boot from the drive without grub even being considered is more likely than grub not doing its job. It wouldn't boot on my sata, for instance, but doing it from an internal ide worked fine [including Grub2], and I've seen examples of it working on legacy grub.
    2: Yes. http://www.insanelymac.com/forum/index. … opic=34227
    3: Not really, assuming you're using a real mac instead of a "hackintosh", but that doesn't seem to be so from your post [I would expect someone to say it the other way around, "I want want to dual boot -Arch-", if theyre using a mac machine]. I'm not sure what kinds of things about this topic would be shaky ground on the forums, so I'll try to keep from saying anything troublesome.. I will remove it if necessary, but I don't expect that to be the case. If you're using a "hackintosh", expect hardware problems (it can be a serious hassle and hack-job installing and getting everything to work) and highly probable legal issues (even if you own OSX). On a side note, I personally think OSX is the most boring, user-limiting OS in existence.. However, on the positive side, it pretty much does what it says it does if you're using the real deal, and does it well.
    Last edited by FrozenFox (2009-04-15 08:51:06)

  • Dual Booting with the MacBook Pro

    I know that on the iMac you can do a dual-boot with PC and Mac, but I am trying to find out if you can do it on the MacBook Pro. Does anyone know?

    hi abbyt - Welcome to Apple Discussions!
    if you mean dual-boot btw OSX and WinXP - you sure can. apple provides Bootcamp for precisely this reason and it works very well...
    http://www.apple.com/macosx/bootcamp/
    if you mean dual-boot btw OSX and some kind of Linux - i have less experience there, but i think its possible. perhaps the easiest way is to use Parallels Workstation (but that's not really dual booting in fact - it's virtualization)...
    what "2nd" OS were you thinking about? cheers

  • Dual boot with Solaris 8.0 and Windows 98

    I am interested in Setting up my pc with with a Dual boot of Solaris 8 and Windows 98. I have a 60 GB hard drive that I am going to make two 30 GB primary Partitions on this hard dive. One with Windows 98 and one with Solaris 8 Intel Platform version. The question that I have, Is this particular Setup doable? And if so can you tell me what order they have to be installed and what partition software I should use for this procedure. Also if i missing procedure please be very detailed in explaining this to me. I read the message board was confused.
    If need be please email me at [email protected]

    Hey, goto http://math.uwb.edu.pl/~mariusz/dualboot/ and that will answer all your dual boot questions ?
    i2l2

  • Can I dual boot with MAC OS/X and Windows

    What is the best way to configure a dual boot on my MAC Bookpro laptop? Also, can I dual boot Windows 8 and MAC OS?

    The first alternative is a dual-boot arrangement between OS X and Windows provided with OS X.
    Windows on Intel Macs
    There are presently several alternatives for running Windows on Intel Macs.
         1. Install the Apple Boot Camp software.  Purchase Windows
             XP w/Service Pak2, Vista, or Windows 7.  For Boot Camp
             4.0 and above you can only use Windows 7 or later. Follow
             instructions in the Boot Camp documentation on
             installation of Boot Camp, creating Driver CD, and
             installing Windows.  Boot Camp enables you to boot the
             computer into OS X or Windows.
         2. Parallels Desktop for Mac and Windows XP, Vista Business,
             Vista Ultimate, or Windows 7.  Parallels is software
             virtualization that enables running Windows concurrently
             with OS X.
         3. VM Fusion and Windows XP, Vista Business, Vista Ultimate,
             or Windows 7.  VM Fusion is software virtualization that
             enables running Windows concurrently with OS X.
         4. CrossOver which enables running many Windows
             applications without having to install Windows.  The
             Windows applications can run concurrently with OS X.
         5. VirtualBox is an Open Source freeware virtual machine such
             as VM Fusion and Parallels that was developed by Solaris.
             It is not as fully developed for the Mac as Parallels and VM
             Fusion.
    Note that VirtualBox, Parallels, and VM Fusion can also run other operating systems such as Linux, Unix, OS/2, Solaris, etc.  There are performance differences between dual-boot systems and virtualization.  The latter tend to be a little slower (not much) and do not provide the video performance of the dual-boot system. See MacTech Labs- Virtualization Benchmarks, January 2013 | MacTech for comparisons of Boot Camp, Parallels, and VM Fusion. Boot Camp is only available with Leopard or Snow Leopard. Except for Crossover and a couple of similar alternatives like DarWine you must have a valid installer disc for Windows.
    You must also have an internal optical drive for installing Windows. Windows cannot be installed from an external optical drive.

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