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Date:      Mon, 23 Sep 1996 21:23:16 +0200
From:      Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@critter.tfs.com>
To:        Bill Fenner <fenner@parc.xerox.com>
Cc:        "Chris Csanady" <ccsanady@friley216.res.iastate.edu>, freebsd-bugs@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Very disturbing boot block problems.. 
Message-ID:  <4314.843506596@critter.tfs.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Mon, 23 Sep 1996 11:24:59 PDT." <96Sep23.112512pdt.177476@crevenia.parc.xerox.com> 

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In message <96Sep23.112512pdt.177476@crevenia.parc.xerox.com>, Bill Fenner writ
es:
>In message <199609180133.UAA01881@friley216.res.iastate.edu>you write:
>>Error: C:1029 > 1023 (BIOS limit)
>>
>>Anyone else ever experienced this?
>
>Yup, I experienced this several times some months ago, and never got an 
>explanation that made sense.

Using the BIOS interface, you cannot read a sector that is on a cylinder
above 1023, this means that if just one sector of the kernel you're 
trying to boot lies beyond cylinder 1023 as seen by the BIOS, you cannot
load it.

When you install FreeBSD the partition editor will warn you about this,
in a rather subtle way I admit, if you look in the in the right hand 
column there will be a '>' if a partition extends past what the BIOS
can cope with.

But just because your filesystem extends past cylinder 1023 doesn't mean
that your kernel is out there, it might be happy camping out down in the
low cylinder numbers.

makes more sense now ?

Poul-Henning
--
Poul-Henning Kamp           | phk@FreeBSD.ORG       FreeBSD Core-team.
http://www.freebsd.org/~phk | phk@login.dknet.dk    Private mailbox.
whois: [PHK]                | phk@ref.tfs.com       TRW Financial Systems, Inc.
Future will arrive by its own means, progress not so.



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