Re: Problems with dual boot and grub

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jludwig wrote:

How does toe BIOS know to go to that partition???



The bios will get information from the partition table. For example, you can set the active partition on hda1,hda2 or hda3 on my setup. They are primary partitions. The active partition is marked with an * for the active partition using fdisk (linux version).

You can't boot from hda4 (extended container) or from hda5 (partition in an extended partition, BIOS is not smart enough to do this.) So you should be able to boot from any partition that you install grub in, as long as it is a primary partition.

Why I have an extended partition that is all used up by linux swap is a bit worthless, but that is the way the installer set it up.

You can set the active partition using the fdisk for windows also. I believe it uses "A" to denote which is the active partition.

Jim

  Device Boot    Start       End    Blocks   Id  System
/dev/hda1   *         1      2173  17454591    7  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/hda2          2174      2186    104422+  83  Linux
/dev/hda3          2187      3583  11221402+  83  Linux
/dev/hda4          3584      3648    522112+   f  Win95 Ext'd (LBA)
/dev/hda5          3584      3648    522081   82  Linux swap



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