On Mon, September 6, 2010 9:53 am, blann wrote:
Aloha Karl,
Below some answers I may have failed to make in text ( and thanks for
your
input):
----- Original Message -----
From: "Karl Pearson"<karlp@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Getting started with Red Hat Linux"<redhat-install-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, September 04, 2010 11:00 AM
Subject: Re: This is just amazing...
Please forgive my top-post, but also forgive my response:
If you are going to "If I may change the subject" to us, please actually
CHANGE THE SUBJECT (line above).
This is called Hijacking A Thread, and isn't very good manners.
Now to your email (see below):
On Fri, September 3, 2010 2:58 pm, blann wrote:
If I may change the subject and, as usual ask for help (and thanks for
past
responses):
Many moons back I must have damaged my MBR (winXP,FC6). A helpful
member
sent a cd with ubuntu , and now there is a boot choice(grub) between
that
OS
and XP.
fdisk /mbr will 'fix' a broken master boot record so you can boot into
WinXP again, though why anyone would without being coerced to, I don't
know.
I am trying to see if I can restore the grub loader to get into my old
FC
installation which is likely
still on my HD. I have tried my disk1 from FC6 to do a reinstall, it
seems to go thru motions,
but a revised grub loader does not come up- even tho I get a message
during
install
that boot loader is being installed- and an installation complete msg.
When you installed Ubuntu (Linux Mint is much better IMHO), do you
remember being asked if you wanted to put it side-by-side with BOTH
WinXP
and FC?
I DO NOT RECALL_ MY OLD MEMORY IS BAD< BUT AT STARTUP A GRUB
LOADER APPEARS< IT CONTAINS UBUNTU,WINXP, UBUNTU RESCUE, AND
A COUPLE OF MEMORY CHECK OPTIONS. SO THE 'LIVE UBUNTU' SEEMS MOUNTED
WITH WINXP OPTION. The HD organization coming up shows a /dev/hdb with
hdb1
ext3(102mb),
and hdb2 LVM PV (117138 mb)- and /dev/sda with sda1-3 and 5-7
partitions,ntfs,ext3,extended,ntfs,
ext3,swap partitions. I need now after some years to go back and review my
partitions to ID.
If you are seeing Grub, then you aren't booting from a Live CD, which you
would have to do to use the disk tools necessary to see what partitions
can be found.
I suspect, sadly, that your FC6 partition was over-written by the Ubuntu
install.
Is there a way to repair or replace what I am assuming is a damaged
mbr/grub
loader due to having
turned off a hung up XP with AC button?
as I wrote above: fdisk /mbr
FDISK sounds like what I may have used years ago to repartition; is it on
disk 1 of my FC6
install?
I doubt it. FC6 wasn't a live CD. You can use fdisk from any version of
Linux to see the partition table, however, and that may be what you need
to do.
Just run Ubuntu and run fdisk as root (sudo fdisk should work). If you
have more than one hard disk in the PC, you will want to run it against
each disk to see what partitions.
FC6 defaulted to ext3, I believe (that may have been FC8???). Rick will
know for sure, as well as a few others on this list. It's been a while
since I happened on an FC6 install to check.
In any case, I would recommend that if you are going to use a multiple-OS
PC, that you get a new hard disk for each OS, unless you know you'll be
using one very sparingly. If that's the case, just run that OS in
VirtualBox and be done with it. That's how I run XP at work and home. I
think I boot them up about once a week, or less.
I have, via generosity of an active member of the group, an FC12 set of
install disks; have hesitated
running this for fear I would overwrite /home directory, whereas the FC
Bible advises that simple
re-install of FC6 should not do this.
Any comments greatly appreciated! Thanks- Marshall
You can always download new ISOs from any distributions downloads page,
and burn them to DVDs or CDs and take them for a test drive. I use CentOS
and FC9 on my servers, and Linux Mint (a derivative of Ubuntu, without all
the restrictions) for my desktops and laptop.
Karl
Any install of FC will overwrite the home directory, unless specifically
told not to. What I do in these cases is boot to a "live CD" such as
Mint
or another Knoppix-like release, then mount the Linux partition, and
copy
/home/ME to a USB-attached external device, such as a disk or flash
drive
that's big enough to hold the data. With some distributions, you could
even burn your home directory to a DVD. I also recommend not worrying
about copying anything other than Documents, etc. Settings are pretty
easy
to recreate, actually, and you get to use the functionality of the new
OS
better that way, too.
BETWEEN COMPUTER IN SD AND SOME USB"S I LIKELY HAVE HOME
DIRECTORY BACKED UP- SO MAYBE I'LL GAMBLE.
Thanks again for your help on this- best wishes,Marshall