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Date:      Sun, 30 Jun 1996 14:24:47 GMT
From:      James Raynard <fqueries@jraynard.demon.co.uk>
To:        mnewton@io.org
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: windows NT and Freebsd on same pc
Message-ID:  <199606301424.OAA00892@jraynard.demon.co.uk>
In-Reply-To: <199606292327.TAA01003@io.org> (mnewton@io.org)

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> On a new pc I need  NT and freebsd on the same drive. NT to test out commerce
> server stuff etc and freebsd as a fast switch backup to our server. 
> on a 1.6gb drive I would assume that I should put nt first (1gb) and freebsd
> in the last 600Mbyte. I guess I can run fdisk from nt to switcth active
> partitions.
>  Any better ideas ?????? 

First of all, the root FreeBSD partition must be in the first 1024
cylinders (528? MB for most hard disks). This is a PC limitation, not
a FreeBSD one. However, the rest of the FreeBSD system can be anywhere
on the disk.

My suggestion would be, using your figures:-

0-20MB		FreeBSD slice with root partition
20-1020MB	WinNT slice
1020-1600MB	FreeBSD slice with other partitions (usr, var, ...).

(BTW a "slice" is what most PC people call a "partition" - a FreeBSD
"partition" is a filesystem within a FreeBSD "slice")

Also, if you accept the option to install a boot manager during the
installation, this will allow you to select the OS to run when the
system boots without having to mess around with fdisk.

-- 
James Raynard, Edinburgh, Scotland
james@jraynard.demon.co.uk
http://www.freebsd.org/~jraynard/



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