I did this with a 486 33 whose BIOS limit was 850Mb. I installed a 6.4GB. DOS could do nothing with it. But linux worked fine. cfdisk detected the whole drive and I never had a problem. Until, I formated a partition using WIN 95 and used it to store data from Win95. Windows really hosed the drive, writting beyond the bounds..I guess now thinking of it the partitions was bigger than what the bios could read so I guess this could even work.
I upgraded to a 166 anyway. > -----Original Message----- > From: Kenneth Scharf [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, March 22, 1999 3:06 PM > To: debian-user@lists.debian.org > Subject: Re: more ram and larger harddrive then the bios can take > > > > > > Q2 > > My bios manual say that it´s limit is 8,4 gb harddrive. But if i > have > > the root inside the 8,4 gb limit is it possible to have, lets say, a > 15 gb > > hardrive? > > Yes but ........ > 1: You MUST have the bootable partition (say /boot) completely below > cylinder 1024. > 2: Fdisk and Cfdisk probably get the disk size from the bios and will > therefore not see the whole disk. You must give the disk parameters > to fdisk in the startup invocation. > == > Amateur Radio, when all else fails! > > http://www.qsl.net/wa2mze > > Debian Gnu Linux, Live Free or ..... > > > _________________________________________________________ > DO YOU YAHOO!? > Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < > /dev/null