Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations strongm on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

installing linux

Status
Not open for further replies.

RyanRamsey99

Technical User
Jan 29, 2001
7
US
ok,i posted a previous thread but didn't quite explain it very well, but anyway.
my computer has two hard drives, but one of them doesn't have anything on it. I just want to be able to install linux on the hard drive that doesn't have anything on it and not mess with partioning or any of my windows stuff on my c: drive, can it really be that easy to get linux up and running on my system? what about dual boot?

any suggestions/tips?

ryanramsey_99@yahoo.com

thanks folks
ryan
 
You should be able specify during the installation process for linux that you want to install lilo, which will allow you to dual boot.

Also, the installation process will ask you where you want to install your various linux partitions - pick that second drive. I did this on mine with no Linux experience at all when I first installed RedHat 6.1.
 
you can also see to get some good faq's on how to set this stuff. As always, I hope that helped!

Disclaimer:
Beware: Studies have shown that research causes cancer in lab rats.
 
Checkout Josh's Linux Guide (get there through a search engine (Yahoo usually does the job)
 
Setting up linux has gotten so easy, it would take you 10 minutes to setup your install, unless you select an Expert install. What distro are you trying to install? Mandrake 7.2 is almost newbie-proof, but shy away from Debian until you've done a couple of linux installs, though Stormix is pretty simple too.

The best place for newbie info is at They have NHFs (Newbie Help Files) for almost everything and if they don't, do a search on the message boards.

This subject has been discussed I don't know how many times...

One more thing, don't feed the trolls ;)
 
I have a couple machines set up as you outline. It really s simpler than it sounds since you do not have to carefully partition a single HDD for two OS.

You should be able to boot with the installation cd or a boot and then root floppy. Both my machines boot nicely from my CD Roms using the Slakware 7.0 and 7.1 distributions. Intead of using setup, you will need to partition the HDD for LINUX.

On one machine, I use a Hard Drive which is attached to the secodary IDE channel as the Master. So it is not hda, nor hdb, but hdc.

To partition the drive boot into Linux. run fdisk /dev/hdc for the third IDE harddrive. My other machine, needs fdisk /dev/hdb since the Linux hard drive is the secon/slave drive on the primary IDE controller, or the second hard drive. (The CD Rom is the third, so it is hdc)

There is also cfdisk, another partitining utility that is more menu driven than fdisk. Of course REdHat also has Disk Druid which is mor like point and click.

Of course, this brings up several related issues, such as the size of the hard drive, swap partitions, toggling the bootable falg for the LINUX partition, and other issues. Most newer hard drives are large enough to have more than 1024 cylinders. Fdisk will mention it, but I have never had a problem with LILO booting these. Still, I usuall do take the trouble to figure out the way the bios translated the drives and use the expert functionality of fdis to change the Cylinders, Heads, and sector size to match what the bios reports with LBA enabled. (The BIOS does the conversion from normal to LBA for me for IDE Hard Drives. SCSI Hard drives depend on the SCSI controller so you have to do it yourself?!)

In fact, setting the CHS the same as the BIOS translation, LILO boots quite well from hdc3 (hdc1 and hdc2 are both swap patitions) despite the fact that hdc3 ends well past 1024 Cylinders.

Once you have that partitioning figured out setup should be simple. Some distributions run Liloconfig at the end, allowing you to configure the LInux LOader to boot as you wish.

It is simple if you follow the instructions step by step by step.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top