On Wed 19 Aug 1998, Michael Stenner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Following instructions I found on this list some time ago, I installed > hamm and win98 separately: each have their own drive - only one was > hooked up at a time. Than, I put both drives in: Linux as hda and win > as hdb. THis was nothing new for linux, so I started up linux and ran > lilo with the following lilo.conf: >
If I read this correctly, you have done the following: 1. Installed Linux on a drive that is seen by the BIOS as drive C. 2. "Removed" this drive and replaced it with another. 3. This new drive, also seen by the BIOS as drive C, has Win98 installed. 4. You set this second drive to be the second (changing its address) and replaced the Linux drive so it is the first. 5. This means the Linux drive is seen as C and the Win98 as D. If this is true, then it may be that your Win98 is failing because the "addressing" is wrong for where it is installed. It expects to be on the first drive but isn't. You could try re-installing the Win98 to the second drive (maybe you want to nuke the existing Win98 partition so it doesn't think you are trying to do an upgrade) and let it handle the MBR on the first disk (note I am not too experienced with the Win95/98 way of doing things - this would work for WinNT no problem). Then redo the lilo.conf (you should have a Linux boot disk before this, just to be sure you can get back to your Linux installation). There is a How-To for setting up a dual boot for WinNT/Linux (using the NT boot loader) which may be helpful in your situation. I do not have the URL for it but I found it in a search of the mailing list archives (look for 'dual boot'). The NT details may or may not be useful but the over all discussion is very good. Hope this helps ;-) --- Bob McGowan i'm: bob dot mcgowan at artecon dot com