Klistvud wrote:
Dne, 08. 12. 2009 08:32:13 je Jochen Schulz napisal(a):
IMHO, your biggest problem won't be with copying/ghosting/dd-ing your
Windows partition: your biggest (in fact, unsurmountable) problem will
be all your C:\Windows and C:\Documents and Settings and C:\Program
Files (and similar) references, hard-coded into your Windows Registry.
IIRC from my (over forever, thankfully!) Windows days, there was no
*easy* way to make a Registry, built on a C:\ drive to work reliably on
a D:\, E:\ and so on. I think your best bet is to use the swap
(hd0,hd1) command in Grub (the syntax is wrong, since I'm quoting from
memory, but you surely know what I mean).
If beside the drive letters (partition locations) their respective
sizes are also a problem, just resize them with GParted, it's an
*incredibly* mature piece of software.
Good luck, you're gonna need it if Windows is involved!
Agreed.
To come up to date a little, Windows can now re-letter drives
persistently. Of course, you do need to boot into it to change the
default... but even in the old days, Windows wouldn't label a drive at
all unless it recognised the filesystem, so you could have one or two
Linux partitions ahead of a Windows one which would still get labelled
C:. You could also get away with some out-of-order partition numbering,
at least with the NT series. The only official way of getting NT4 onto a
large drive involved two separate installations of it and some decidedly
dodgy partition ordering, placing a primary after the extended
partition. What you really had to avoid with a multi-partition Windows
installation was adding a second drive containing one or more primary
partitions, the first of which would be auto-lettered D:, which would
totally screw up Windows.
The Vista bootloader bears no resemblance at all to the NT-to-XP
version. There's no boot.ini and in fact no text configuration file.
Configuration must be done with a Microsoft utility. On the plus side,
the bootloader is much more powerful, and among other things can
schedule a number of boots to different OSes. This is useful to
remotely dual/multi-boot without getting stuck in one OS.
--
Joe
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