Package: installation
Severity: important
Justification: fails to build from source


   Windows identifies two partitions (drives) involved in the boot
process - the boot drive and the system drive. The boot drive is
the active partition and the system drive is the drive containing
the Windows kernel (ntoskrnl.exe)
   The Windows-Based Install for Debian assumes that the Windows
boot drive and system drive are the same. The install uses
the value in %SystemDrive% to identify where to install the grub
bootloader stuff (g2ldr, g2ldr.mbr, grub.conf) and the \debian 
directory.  This is AOK for most Windows installations.
   However the root drive and system drive can be different (e.g.
I have a small boot partition that will boot either Vista or 
XP both of which are located in a separate partition).  In this case 
the Debian boot-install will not boot.
   The temporary fix is to reboot into Windows and copy/move 
\g2ldr, \g2ldr.mbr, \grub.conf and \debian into the boot drive.  
Then reboot and do the install.
   The Debian install should check to see if the file "\ntldr" (for
Windows NT, 2000, server 2000. XP, server 2003) or "\bootmgr" (for
Vista and Server 2008) exists in %SystemDrive%.  If neither doesn't
exist then Debian should (a) search for them or (b) ask the user
where the initial boot program is located.  Identifying the active
partition may not be sufficient as the user may be using a non-
Windows bootloader that doesn't rely on the active partition to boot.
   I hope this helps to improve the install process.


-- System Information:
Debian Release: 4.0
  APT prefers stable
  APT policy: (500, 'stable')
Architecture: amd64 (x86_64)
Shell:  /bin/sh linked to /bin/bash
Kernel: Linux 2.6.18-6-amd64
Locale: LANG=en_US.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_US.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8)



-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

Reply via email to