I am definitely a casual GNU/Linux user and a newbie, so please don't take take this suggestion as absolutely correct.
When I first used Linux it was RHat, and I definitely wanted to keep Windows working without incident. My approach was to load Linux on a second hard drive & physically switch the IDE cable to dual boot. Yes, I know, primitive. I did a bit of reading and found that I could leave the Linux disk as primary, & use LILO to boot Windows on the second drive. You will need more information on bootable partitions and drive addressing (that is, hda & hdc). I'm very foggy in those areas. The command 'fdisk' can make partitions bootable. I believe that wherever LILO is located must be a bootable partition. The lilo.conf file that achieved booting from selected disks follows: boot=/dev/hda map=/boot/map install=/boot/boot.b prompt timeout=50 disk = /dev/hdc sectors = 63 heads = 255 cylinders = 784 other=/dev/hdc1 map-drive = 0x80 to = 0x81 map-drive = 0x81 to = 0x80 label = win95 table = /dev/hdc image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.0.31 label=linux root=/dev/hda1 read-only I hope this was some help, & good luck! Barry On Tue, Apr 24, 2001 at 10:24:56AM -0500, Brian Smith ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > I just got Debian installed (potatoe), and due to the way I had to get > the old machine up and gonig to install from CD rom, the hard disk on > which I installed is connected to the second IDE master, not the > primary. The installation routine located it as /dev/hdc1. > > How can I modify my configuration so I can physically disconnect this > disk and connect it to the primary IDE channel, and make it bootable. > I'm booting from floppy right now. When I tried to make the disk > bootable during install, I got some error "incorrect geometry" or > something like that, I could load LILO on either hard disk for some > reason. > > Any help is appreciated, I've got on old Pentium 100, 72 Mb RAM, windoze > disk is 800 Mb, Linux disk is 1 Gb. > > Brian > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] >