On Sun, 2004-04-18 at 23:00, Paul Dickson wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Apr 2004 09:41:27 -0700, Roy Babin wrote:
>
> > I have Suse8.2 installed, now the wife would like to have Windows HP
> > installed also. When I try to install I get the following message.
> >
> > "The hard drive does not contain a FAT16 or Fat32 Windows partition."
> > This may be caused by any of the following reasons.
> > 1 You are using an NTFS (Windows) file system.
> > 2 you are using an HPFS (OS/2) file system
> > 3 The last partition on your drive was NTFS or an HPFS Partition.
> >
> > What may I do to correct the situation and keep the wife happy?
> > Thank you for any help one mught be.
>
> Make sure any partitions created on the HD are created by Microsoft's
> FDISK program. In the past, I've had an Win98 install overwrite Win2K
> because I had created the partition table with the linux fdisk program.
---
Actually, this shouldn't matter at all to Windows but I have seen a
number of the 'restore' disks that came from vendors such as Dell,
Gateway, eMachines that simply reformatted the /dev/hda disk and
installed Win98. The Windows 98 installer was much more polite than
that. Windows NT/2K/XP all allow you to choose the disk and
create/delete existing partitions so that would never happen unless you
choose it to happen.
---
>
> So my rule of thumb: If you are going to use any version of Windows on a
> HD, partition it with Microsoft's FDISK.
>
> I've had no trouble installing Linux, Win2K, and Win98 on a HD (even in
> that order) once the HD was partitioned with FDISK. If you know what
> you're doing installing the OS's in that order isn't much of a problem.
----
It's always easier to install Windows first and then Linux afterwards
simply because the boot loader for Linux installed last can detect
Windows partitions and create the grub/lilo entries for you. If you have
a disk already formatted for Linux and the bootloader installed...it's
probably a good idea to boot the Windows 98 cd, exit the setup program
and run the command 'fdisk /mbr' to clear the bootloader from the boot
blocks of the hard drive to allow Windows to install it's bootloader
which will be ultimately replaced by subsequent Linux install.
Craig
---------------------------------------------------
PLUG-discuss mailing list -
PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings:
http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss