Re: Dual booting fc5 & fc6

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George Hare wrote:
Many thanks to Jim, Robert and Nigel. When I installed fc6 I got
/1/boot/....I thought my selection at that point would auto-magically
put fc6 in my selections at boot time. It seemed to go just like that
when I dual booted RH8 and NT, but I guess much has changed since
then.

I don't recall any other OS entries ever being added for any Linux OS automatically. I did see DOS and win32 added to grub entries though.

I intended to eliminate the last fc5 under the "chainload + 1"
but you guys are a bit over my head here and I had no idea you could
install grub more than once...not that I want to yet.

Nobody offered a solution at the time,but a statement was made that having to edit the grub.conf from one installation to the other distribution was something that did not interest them. Later on through experimentation with setups I figured out how to chainload one distribution from the other. If you have two seperate /boot partitions for each distribution, you have grub for each one. Anyway, the greatest advantage to chainloading vs. editing grub each time a release gets a new kernel added or removed. With multiple chainloaded grub setups, the housekeeping is done by the package management utilities and you do not have to edit your grub file all the time. I personally do not miss the manual editing from distro to distro.

/dev/hda1 is where I have fc5, /dev/hda2 is a swap, /dev/hda3 is
where fc6 is and has no mount point according to the LVM, /dev/hda4
is an extended partition ?

hda4 will contain all of your partitions above 4 and is not a usable partition. It just holds your partitions above hda4 that will be located in your extended partition. So partition 5 would probably start at the same cylinder as the extended partition hda4 begins. From that point on will be your partition 6 through your maximum desired partition number within dev hda4. Simplistically, if extended partition hda4 cylinder started at 1000 and hda5 started at 1000 and ended at 1050, you can add another partition starting at 1051 through 1111. The extented partition may end at say 2000, so you can contain all the additional partitions in that space. hda4 is of course not mountable or anything.

I did not ask for that(110G), then /dev/hda5 is swap,
then it says I have 110G of unpartitioned and uninitialized space on hda. I thought the partitioning possibilities were a bit confusing; but then, I find many things confusing.

You might want to search for partitioning hard drives on primary and extended partitions for more understanding.

Below is my fc5 grub config.
I know you guys are busy and don't always have time to hold someone's
 hand, but I really appreciate your help. # grub.conf generated by
anaconda
#
# Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file
# NOTICE:  You do not have a /boot partition.  This means that
#          all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /, eg.
#          root (hd0,0)
#          kernel /boot/vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/hda1
#          initrd /boot/initrd-version.img
#boot=/dev/hda
default=0
timeout=8
splashimage=(hd0,0)/boot/grub/splash.xpm.gz
hiddenmenu
title Fedora Core (2.6.18-1.2200.fc5)
    root (hd0,0)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.18-1.2200.fc5 ro root=LABEL=/1 rhgb quiet
    initrd /boot/initrd-2.6.18-1.2200.fc5.img
title Fedora 6
root (hd0,2) /1/boot/grub/grub.conf
chainloader + 1

I'm not familiar with this sort of information that you entered immediately above. Does it work? It looks like it might reference the FC6 grub file and allow booting as referenced in the grub.conf file. If so, I might try such an entry.

title Fedora Core (2.6.15-1.2054_FC5)
    root (hd0,0)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.15-1.2054_FC5 ro root=LABEL=/1 rhgb quiet
    initrd /boot/initrd-2.6.15-1.2054_FC5.img

George hare

Jim

My chainloaded grub.conf contains the below:

cat /etc/grub.conf
# grub.conf generated by anaconda
#
# Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file
# NOTICE:  You have a /boot partition.  This means that
#          all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /boot/, eg.
#          root (hd1,0)
#          kernel /vmlinuz-version ro root=/dev/hdb4
#          initrd /initrd-version.img
#boot=/dev/hdb1
default=0
timeout=5
splashimage=(hd1,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz
hiddenmenu
title Fedora Core (2.6.18-1.2798.fc6)
        root (hd1,0)
        kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-1.2798.fc6 ro root=LABEL=/80g rhgb quiet
        initrd /initrd-2.6.18-1.2798.fc6.img
title Fedora Core (2.6.18-1.2784.fc6)
        root (hd1,0)
        kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-1.2784.fc6 ro root=LABEL=/80g rhgb quiet
        initrd /initrd-2.6.18-1.2784.fc6.img
title Other
        rootnoverify (hd0,0)
        chainloader +1



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