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Date:      Sun, 14 Aug 2005 11:19:44 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Milscvaer <millueradfa@yahoo.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Failed installation of FreeBSD 5.4
Message-ID:  <20050814181945.50300.qmail@web54504.mail.yahoo.com>
In-Reply-To: <u864u85xch.4u8@mail.opusnet.com>

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--- "Gary W. Swearingen" <garys@opusnet.com> wrote:

> Milscvaer <millueradfa@yahoo.com> writes:
> 
> > I would like to try to boot the system on the hard
> > driv e from a floppy. Maybe there is something
> wrong
> > with the boot record on the HD. Does anyone know
> if
> > this is possible and how I can do that?
> 
> Sure, but you've left us in the dark as to what you
> have to work with
> there.  Do you have FreeBSD or some unixy OS on
> another system or on a
> "live CD"?  Or just a floppy "fixit"? Or what?  Do
> you have enough
> hard disk space to leave your /usr/home out of the
> picture until you
> get FreeBSD going on another part of the disk?
> (Maybe after deleting
> unneeded parts of /usr/home's filesystem.)
> 
> Anyway, if you can run a FreeBSD off a fixit or live
> CD somehow, you
> can "bsdlabel" to put /boot/boot = boot+boot2 on a
> floppy so you
> should be able to get a "boot2" prompt (the one
> before the "loader"
> prompt) and try to boot your 5.4 from there.  Or you
> could try using
> "fdisk" and "boot0cfg" and "bsdlabel" to put new
> boot records (MBR,
> boot1, and boot2) on a floppy or on your hard disk,
> too.
> 
> If you can DL and burn a CD, get yourself a "live
> CD" or CD-based
> "fixit", else try to find room on your HD for a
> fresh minimal FreeBSD
> install, else get an old HD and install fresh to
> that.  Another thing
> you could try is getting a Grub floppy off the
> Internet and try
> booting from the Grub command line.
> 
> I suppose that your problem is related to the fact
> that your "upgrade"
> is reusing your old partition(s) and maybe old boot
> records.
> 
> BTW, if you can keep your /usr/home out of the
> picture and then copy
> it to your new system, you can end up with nice new
> UFS2 filesystems.
> 
> BTW, if that's your only copy of /usr/home, you
> probably shouldn't be
> trying to install a new OS on the disk anyway.  You
> should be able to
> find another HD for a small FreeBSD (or a copy of
> /usr/home) for VERY
> little money these days.
> 


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