Date: Fri, 12 Jan 2001 16:43:41 +0700 (GMT) From: Jarungwit BOONPERM <bjarungw@bunga.pn.psu.ac.th> To: David Schultz <vvortex1@home.com> Cc: <freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG> Subject: Re: Problem about FreeBSD-4.2. Message-ID: <Pine.GSO.4.31.0101121533230.24167-100000@bunga.pn.psu.ac.th> In-Reply-To: <001601c07bba$e2731420$0100a8c0@mshome.net>
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Dear David,
Sorry to distrub you again and again.
I still have problem. When I installed FreeBSD-4.2 on "HP Netserver
e60 intel PentitiumIII 550Mhz" it has message below when I reboot
system.
F1 FreeBSD
F5 Drive 1
Default: F1
I don't to show this messages.
But when install on another PC (HP Vectra VL 166), this messages
not occur.
Boths machines I select same option when I installed that show
below.
custom install
(*) None Leave the Master Boot Record untouched
Distributions ---> 8 User
About "HP NetServer e60 intel PentitiumIII 550Mhz" I ever installed
FreeBSD-4.1.1 before I installed FreeBSD-4.2 on last December 2000.
When I try to press "F5", it shows messages below.
Invalid partition
No /boot/loader
Do you have anything to advice me again ?
Thank you very much.
regards,
Jarungwit.
On Thu, 11 Jan 2001, David Schultz wrote:
> > But when reboot computer It show message below.
> > F1 FreeBSD
> > F5 Drive 1
> > Default: F1
>
> If the Boot Manager is, in fact, being installed, then the problem most
> likely is not with FreeBSD. (Nevertheless, it is not possible to install the
> boot manager by selecting a "Standard" boot record during installation
> unless 4.2 has some bizarre bug that I'm not aware of.)
>
> I assume that you have some other operating system that you're trying to
> boot on your first hard drive and it isn't showing up. First of all, I
> should note that if the OS is on a different hard drive, you need to press
> F5 to see it. The OS also needs to be on a visible, bootable partition as
> well, and I'm pretty sure that FreeBSD's boot manager does not support OS's
> in extended partitions. Unless you have more than four operating systems on
> your computer, this should not be an issue.
>
> If you do have some odd setup like an extended partition, you may need a
> more advanced boot manager. I personally like Ranish Partition Manager
> [http://www.users.intercom.com/~ranish/part/]. The source would need much
> modification to work under FreeBSD, so you will need a bootable DOS diskette
> to install it. Partition Magic also comes with a good (albeit non-free) boot
> manager, but it requires Windows to install and a DOS partition to hold its
> massive, clunky GUI.
>
>
>
>
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