On Fri, 1 May 1998, Graham Pople wrote: > >Just received Debian Linux on the LSL CD which will be used on a shared > >Pentium which already has Windows 95 installed. The installation > >instructions look straight forward with one exception. It is not clear > >whether the installation routine is designed to overwrite what is > >already on the hard disk or if only the unused part of the disk will be > >used. Could someone please point me to a discussion of this and/or more > >basic information about disk partitioning? This must be an elementary > >question but is not apparent in the FAQs. > > > Basically, you need to download a DOS program called FIPS (just search > for it on the internet). Now, defragment your hard drive in Win95, then > immediately exit to DOS and run FIPS. You can now decrease the size of > your Win95 partition, leaving you room to slot in another partition for > Linux in the setup program. If you just change your Win95 partition into > a Linux partition, all the info on that partition will be deleted, > including Win95. You just have to have two partitions (well, three, > since you need anotehr one for your Linux swap file).
Actually fips is on the cdrom in /tools. If the Win95 system is OSR2 (4.00B) with FAT32, you will need to get fips15c, which is available from ftp.debian.org in /pub/debian/tools. Another choice would be the commercial Partition Magic 3.x, which also handles FAT32 and includes a good boot manager for dual booting linux/win95, although this can also be done with LILO, which is on the debian cd-rom. Bob ---- Bob Nielsen Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tucson, AZ AMPRnet: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.primenet.com/~nielsen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]