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Date:      Sat, 21 Jul 2001 03:22:04 -0400
From:      Garance A Drosihn <drosih@rpi.edu>
To:        Thierry Herbelot <thierry@herbelot.com>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Cc:        Wilko Bulte <wkb@freebie.xs4all.nl>
Subject:   Re: dual booting -stable & -current
Message-ID:  <p0510100cb77eda3bedf6@[128.113.24.47]>
In-Reply-To: <3B59234D.CAADC791@herbelot.com>
References:  <20010720183229.A9022@freebie.xs4all.nl> <20010720210609.A53370@dragon.nuxi.com> <3B59234D.CAADC791@herbelot.com>

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At 8:38 AM +0200 7/21/01, Thierry Herbelot wrote:
>David O'Brien wrote:
>  > You are getting bit by the "root" aliasing code (IIRC this is the
>  > right way to describe the problem).  This makes it impossible to
>  > install multiple copies of FreeBSD on a single disk w/o hacking
>  > around the system. :-(
>
>I do not understand what this problem is :
>- I've got one system with two bootable FreeBSD "BIOS" partitions
>   (the one I already sent info about (these are two -Stable
>   versions) and both versions have been installed via
>   /stand/sysinstall

How did you do those two installs though?  David is not saying that
dual-booting does not work.  He is saying that the sysinstall step
can get in your way, depending on how you try to create the two
systems you want to boot between.  Once you GET the slices and
partitions set up right, then the booting process can easily handle
multiple freebsd systems on a single disk.

For instance, in the following sequence you should not run into
any trouble with sysinstall:

      first set up a dual-boot system with the first dos-style
      slice being Windows, and the second one holding freebsd.

      after running this way for awhile, you decide that you do
      not need windows any more.  So you again boot off the
      FreeBSD cd, you blow away Windows, and you install a second
      snapshot of freebsd on the slice which used to be Windows.

For both of those freebsd installs, at the time of the install the
first slice on the disk which was of type freebsd was also the slice
that you wanted root (the '/' partition) of the new installation to
be on.  So, sysinstall has no trouble with what you want to do.

Where you have trouble is if you have two dos-style slices defined,
both of type freebsd, and you want sysinstall to install into the
second of those two slices.

-- 
Garance Alistair Drosehn            =   gad@eclipse.acs.rpi.edu
Senior Systems Programmer           or  gad@freebsd.org
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute    or  drosih@rpi.edu

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