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Date:      Thu, 15 Jan 1998 14:42:27 -0800
From:      Jonathan Hahn <hahn@and.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG, hahn@and.com
Cc:        freebsd-install@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: installing on FAT32 w/Partition Magic
Message-ID:  <199801152242.OAA04752@and.com>

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Thanks to all who offered help (correct and otherwise!).  The
solution was that I had to swap the Windows and FreeBSD DOS partitions
(using Partition Magic) so FreeBSD was first.  This then allowed
me to create slices.

I'm content with this solution, but I have a little more to discuss
if anyone's interested.  I had read many things about partition restrictions
restricitons.  In particular, I read that the FreeBSD DOS partition
cannot be beyond 1024 cylinders from the MBR.  This is the restriction
I violated, as far as I know (my disk is 2GB, Win95 is 1.5GB and
FreeBSD is .5GB).

The issue is that my (logical?) disk geometry had less than 600
cylinders, so I didn't think I had to worry about the 1024 cyl
restriction.  I wouldn't be surprised if there were > 1024 physical
cylinders and there probably are and it's probably the physical
cylinder number that the restriction refers to.  I don't believe I've
encountered a tools which tells me the number of physical cylinders...


Also, I read somewhere (the FreeBSD help docs I think) that Win95 had
to be in the first partition (of the first disk).  This clearly isn't
the case.  I have it in the second and it boots fine.

Now I have a problem accessing my CDROM...

-jonathan hahn



> The problem is that when I try to create Unix partitions in the new
> DOS partition, the install program refuses.  If I try to create a
> root file system of any size, I get:
> 
> 	This region cannot be used for your root partition as the
> 	FreeBSD boot code cannot deal with a root partition created
> 	in that location.  Please choose another partition or
> 	smaller size for your root partition and try again!



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