From: Digest To: "OS/2GenAu Digest" Date: Tue, 27 Jul 2010 00:00:14 EST-10EDT,10,1,0,7200,4,1,0,7200,3600 Subject: [os2genau_digest] No. 1992 Reply-To: X-List-Unsubscribe: www.os2site.com/list/ ************************************************** Monday 26 July 2010 Number 1992 ************************************************** Subjects for today 1 Re: BootManager : Alan Duval **= Email 1 ==========================** Date: Mon, 26 Jul 2010 18:24:03 +1000 From: Alan Duval Subject: Re: BootManager Mike O'Connor wrote: > Nicholas Lysaght wrote: >> Hi All. >> >> Got my letter back from Doug. This is what he said: >> ----------- >> "Pass on what you think might be useful. I wouldn't bother with Air >> Boot. I think that will just make things more difficult down the road." >> ---------- >> >> I will now pass on what (hopefully) will be relevant: >> >> --------------- >> >>>>> When Phase 1 of the install finished, and it tried to >>>>> reboot, that's when the Win7 Boot Manager came up. >> >> I would have done a Ctrl-Alt-Del at that point, to force it to go to >> the BM menu, rather than trying to do an automatic boot (which gets you >> to the windows boot manager). Once you get BM taught that eCS is the >> default boot drive, it should work. You could also set that using LVM >> in the BM setup. >> >> Install windows, as it likes. >> Use windows to shrink it's partitions >> Use the windows version of DFSEE to verify that all is happiness, and >> create the new partitions for eCS, leaving 7 Mb of empty space at the >> very end of the disk (for BM, and if the disk is larger than about 500 >> GB, it will need to be 15 Mb). Write a new MBR, keeping the tables. >> Now, install eCS, and when it comes to the point where you need to run >> LVM, you should be able to install Boot Manger, and set up the the >> bootable disks, and make BM startable. At that time, make the volume >> that you wish to install to the default boot volume (not sure if that >> will actually work, but it should be okay if you use Ctrl-Alt-Del if >> windows BM shows it's ugly head). >> Before continuing, format the rest of the eCS volumes as you want them. >> Now let the install go, and it should work, but you need to watch the >> first reboot to be sure that it goes to eCS, and not to windows boot >> manager. >> ---------------------------- >> >> So there you have it. I have yet to try this one out myself, but it >> would be great to keep our tools are within what we have. >> >> Regards >> >> NICK >> >> >> > Hi Nick, > > Those are my own sentiments - have been for a very long time (5+ years > now - when System Commander failed to boot to JFS-bootable volumes!) > > Only problem is to have the installation media for W7 that will accept a > DOS-partitioned disk, and not force an EFI system. > > I was about to respond with the following a little earlier - but I was > chasing the following image I have since put up on my (Google) Picasaweb > page: [long link!] > > {http://picasaweb.google dot com dot au/majilok/EFIPartitionedDisksWin7PlusECSPlusLinux?authkey=Gv1sRgCKjaiauEi_7DowE&feat=directlink} > > > >> Hi Nick, >> >> How does that AB procedure go with adding a Ubuntu 10.4 installation >> that Alan would like also? >> >> Did you carefully examine those sectors after the MBR in the first >> track of the disk (e.g. with GU's diskedit.exe), before shrinking the >> Win7 volume? What geometry did DFSee show for the Win7 volume? Is it >> a 1MB per cylinder geometry? Was it JFS or HPFS? >> > > > Regards, > Mike > I've followed the above procedure but BootManager seems to affect the Windows installer as Windows booting only gets to the windows splash logo and no further. I tried to fix this with the Win System Repair Disk but can't. I had imaged the 100 MB Win partition and the main Win 7 Partition so decided to restore them from the image but Boot Manager still couldn't start Win 7. Then reinstalled Win 7 to a cleared HD and downloaded VirtualBox and installed it. Then installed eCS into a vdi . This works but switching to full screen doesn't make the eCS window full screen. I think the additions need to be installed but clicking on "Install additions" doesn't do so. Can someone enlighten me as to how to install the additions when eCS is the guest OS? Somehow I think I'll eventually go back to my tried and true practice and install each OS on individual hard drives in "Super Racks" which can be installed or removed at will. It avoids all the problems of trying to get different OSes coexisting on a disk. Regards, Alan Duval -------------------------------------------------- http://www./melbpc/ - The Melbourne OS/2 SIG ===