I'm new to GNU/Linux & Debian and am having a problem with installing to a system running Win2k. I've done a lot of reading on the dual-boot subject but haven't seen anything to make me believe there's anything wrong with my setup. Basically, my partitions looked like this:
Primary: C: / hda1 Primary, extended { D: / hda5 E: / hda6 F: / hda7 G: / hda8 } hda8 was fairly large and mostly unused so I deleted it using partition magic in DOS and created hda8, 9 & 10 (for /, /home & swap) using cfdisk. Debian installed just fine :-) and i made a boot disk in the meantime (rather than installing lilo) with the aim of dd'ing the bootsector to c: and using winboot (or whatever they call it) for switching, at least until I figure out lilo.conf. The problem occurred when i booted up Windows. It took forever, maybe about 10 minutes with lots of disk activity, and when it had booted explorer was sloooow; not annoyingly slow, catastrophicly slow, taking 2 minutes to show a context menu. hda8/9/10 now showed up in Windows as Local Disk G:, filesystem type unknown, and it became clear that the problem only occurs when explorer needs to show G: in MyComputer, save dialogs and the like. I've now deleted the extended partition completely and so can be flexible with the partitioning scheme. 3 vfat Primary partitions and one extended for Debian would be acceptable, but I'd like to know what the problem is, since I've seen similar setups work for other people with no problems and it seems a bit limiting to not allow Windows and Debian to share the extended partition. Any advice or pointers to info would be much appreciated. Cheers! Jerry K -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]