Garrett Cooper wrote:
I'll take the opposite approach and let them fixed (I am still just playing) so that we can make also "the other" experience.
Iavor

Something I've learned: Letting PM actually 'fix' an issue with a non-standard Windows based MBR is _not_ a good idea. That's toasted several grub installs of mine as well as other things. So, if everything works, such that all partitions are usable as they should be, one should leave them well enough alone. Partition Magic can't keep up with the large degree of FS'es/configurations, so in many cases it in fact behind in development on the Unix support end by a large degree.
-Garrett

I am not sure I understand the MBR part. I left the NTLDR to handle the dual boot (by copying boot1 to C: and adding a line to boot.ini) as ThinkPad has special boot loader that can boot from the restore partition by pressing F11 at boot time. I could not make another boot loader to boot the restore partition. It is somehow special. So the MBR is standard.

I can see the point about PartitionMagic not understanding many FS'es/configurations. PM marks partitions it does not understand in yellow ("other"). Just I was wondering why after creating the FreeBSD partition with the partition utility that is part of the FreeBSD installation process - PartitionMagic found "problems" outside the FreeBSD partition. Isn't the partitions table kind of "international" territory where FreeBSD should touch only its own "land"?

Is there a tool for management of mixed NTFS, FreeBSD and FAT32 partitions without such headaches or one should just get used to live with them? It is hard to add second HDD to a laptop...

_______________________________________________
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"

Reply via email to