Jud: I was done with booting the system with kern.flp & mfsboot.flp. After that I needed a DOS bootdisk in a hurry and not having any spare disks (at that location) I tried to make up a DOS disk from one of the *.flp disks. Thats when I discovered that the new disk I just used for the second time (it was a DOS bootdisk, the first time) has developed "bad sectors".
I am really curious to know if DOS format command cannot really reformate the boot sector of BSD boot code. If so is there a program that can revert the disk to its pristine state :-) This is really an intellectual curiosity rather than trying to save a 10cent floppy. Regards Harsha Godavari Jud wrote: > > >Simon: > > I prepared both kern.flp & mfsroot.flp. When i tried to format > >one of those into a DOS bootdisk, it was formatted but without the > >system files. Scandisk showed sectors marked "bad". The disk was > >unbootable. Is there anyway that that disk can be cleaned up? > > > >Regards > >Harsha Godavari > > Whoa there, Harsha - kern.flp and mfsroot.flp will take care of booting > your machine into a FreeBSD installation all by themselves. No DOS > boot disk required. (Yes, operating systems other than Windows - > FreeBSD, Linux, etc. - can boot your computer.:) Just two freshly > formatted *empty* disks are required on which to image (with the > fdimage utility) kern.flp and mfsroot.flp. > > Jud To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message