Date: Sun, 6 Sep 1998 20:24:42 -0600 (MDT) From: Brian Handy <handy@lambic.physics.montana.edu> To: Mike Smith <mike@smith.net.au> Cc: freebsd-mobile@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: Partitioning HD's on a TP Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.4.02A.9809062021540.4729-100000@lambic.physics.montana.edu> In-Reply-To: <199809062212.PAA10291@word.smith.net.au>
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[I've solved my own problem... >> I'm setting up an IBM TP560X with a relatively gargantuan 6.4GB hard drive >> to run Win95 and FreeBSD. >> >> My plan was to make the Win95 partition 2GB and give the rest to FreeBSD, >> but I seem to be bumping up against the "keep all your root partitions >> below the 1024 cylinder limit" problem. In the tutorials there is talk of >> using an "LBA" mode under some BIOS setups. I haven't been able to locate >> this animal in the startup stuff on my Thinkpad. > >Boot the FreeBSD install floppy with "-v" and when sysinstall comes up, >use the scrollback to look for the "BIOS geometries" message. OK, I figured out what's up. I was starting with blank, empty hard drives, and sysinstall wasn't getting the geometry right. I went in with MS-DOS, fdisk and format and made partitions and formatted the first one. Having done this, suddenly the disk geometry changed completely and I was able to do what I wanted to do. Interestingly...FreeBSD guessed the geometry to have something like 13,000 cylinders on a 6.4GB HD. When I DOS-formatted the first partition, that number dropped down to < 900. :-) SO: The TP's seem to have LBA in the BIOS. (I think that's what this means anyway.) Always keep your old MS-DOS floppies running around. Brian To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-mobile" in the body of the message
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