On Sat, 1 Nov 1997, Pierre Sarrazin wrote: > I have a 2-gigabyte hard disk that has more than 1024 cylinders. > Since it was originally installed with a 486 motherboard with > a BIOS that couldn't handle more than 1024 cylinders, I installed > a patch from the disk's manufacturer. Today, this hard disk is > installed with a Pentium motherboard with a modern BIOS, but the > patch is still there.
Been through the same thing. I wouldn't try to remove the patch (e.g. don't use lilo). If it's onTrack, I've used that successfully with linux until my harddrive crashed, and then I got rid of it. > The end of Debian's quarter is the /usr filesystem. > I had to format it manually with mke2fs by specifying > explicitly the number of blocks. I used the number of > blocks that Linux's fdisk displayed for /usr. This doesn't sound good to me. mke2fs is supposed to autodetect that and do everything if you just say mke2fs /dev/hda2. I'm a little concerned that you may have run off the end of your partition and into the dos partition by doing this. > The installation of Debian went well, but when I > rebooted, DOS/Windows 95 could not read D: anymore > (General failure reading drive D:). > > I went into DOS FDISK. This is the partition table that it > displayed: > > Partition Status Type Volume Label Mbytes System Usage > C: 1 A PRI DOS DISK1_VOL1 478 FAT16 25% > 2 Non-DOS 478 25% > 3 EXT DOS 937 49% > > This is the Logical DOS Drive Information that FDISK displayed: > > Drv Volume Label Mbytes System Usage > D: 478 UNKNOWN 51% > > The UNKNOWN used to be FAT16. The volume label used to be > DISK1_VOL1. I haven't lost much in that drive, but it would be > less trouble if I could recover the contents. > > Is it possible that if I could change that UNKNOWN back to > FAT16, D: would become readable again and its filesystem could > be intact? If yes, then how can I force this change? My best guess is that you probably have a super block written somewhere early in the drive, maybe in the partition info, or worse, in the fat. I don't know what dos will do if you change the type, it may mess with the fat to give you a clean partition. I'd try linux fdisk first, and just change the type. > If I reformat D: under DOS, could this corrupt Debian and/or > its /usr filesystem? I'd call the linux install a failed one since it's messing with dos, and start over from scratch after you get dos working again. In fact, run fdisk from the rescue disk if you can, so you aren't messing with a running filesystem. > Can I use BIOS calls to try to read the tracks that correspond > to drive D: to try to recover a few files (if the filesystem > happens to be intact)? I suppose that would be Interrupt 13h, > service 02h. Woo, over my head here. Good luck, Brandon ----- Brandon Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "We all know linux is great... it PGP: finger -l [EMAIL PROTECTED] does infinite loops in 5 seconds" Phone: (757) 221-4847 --Linus Trovalds -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .