Date: Tue, 16 Apr 2002 12:18:41 +0200 From: "Patrick O'Reilly" <bsd@perimeter.co.za> To: "Peter Leftwich" <Hostmaster@Video2Video.Com>, "Mike Meyer" <mwm-dated-1018566993.77f10e@mired.org> Cc: "mpd" <mpd6334@cs.rit.edu>, "FreeBSD Questions" <FreeBSD-Questions@FreeBSD.ORG> Subject: Re: MBR, mfsroot.flp, handbook, and list fail me! [mwm] Message-ID: <017301c1e530$174f04d0$b50d030a@PATRICK> References: <20020415205947.J24688-100000@earl-grey.cloud9.net>
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Hi again Peter! ----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter Leftwich" <Hostmaster@Video2Video.Com> > On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, Mike Meyer wrote: > > They install two different things. fdisk installs /dev/mbr, which should be the standard boot manager. boot0cfg installs /dev/boot0, which is the FreeBSD boot manager. If you're getting a different behavior, either 1) something is broken on your system, or 2) there's a serious bug somewhere. > > No. I've used "fdisk -B da0" to do this on my SCSI-based systems. > Way-way-wait... I appreciate the assistance, Mike but one moment you gave > an example that used "fdisk -B -b" and the one above is just "fdisk -B" so > now I am growing unnecessarily confused. In a nutshell: > > * When I run "boot0cfg" alone, it seems to know about too much stuff. > * I don't want a boot-manager at all. No F1, F2, etc menus please. :) > * I want the "active partition" (wordchoice?) to be /dev/ad0s2a (FreeBSD). > * I still want to be able to mount /dev/ad0s1 (MSDOS/Win98SR1). In a previous mail in this thread I said: " I just tried 'fdisk -B ad0', and it has correctly 'demoted' the boot manager to just go ahead and boot the first partition." The -b argument to fdisk will allow you to specify one of the alternative boot codes, but the one you want is /boot/mbr, which is the default value for -b. Therefore, you do not need to specify it when typing the command. As Mike said above, and as I confirmed, this should do the trick for you: # fdisk -B ad0 Alternatively, you can do EXACTLY the same thing by typing: # fdisk -B -b /boot/mbr ad0 Mike used "da0" because his is a SCSI disk, but yours is IDE, so "ad0" is the way to go. If you need to set the active partition, use: # fdisk -a ad0 Regards, Patrick O'Reilly. ___ _ __ / _ )__ __ (_)_ __ ___ _/ /____ __ / __/ -_) _) / ~ ) -_), ,-/ -_) _) /_/ \__/_//_/_/~/_/\__/ \__/\__/_/ http://www.perimeter.co.za To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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