On 2003-01-16 20:45, Dan Aiello <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > Windows 2000 won't touch your boot loader, IIRC. > > > > And even if it does, you can boot of a FreeBSD install CD, got to the fdisk > > section and tell it to write changes (without changing anything) and you'll > > get the option to replace the FreeBSD boot loader. > > > > Warning on this, exactly which buttons you select determines whether or not > > the bootloader gets installed. I did it like 3 times or something before it > > worked the last time I had to, but the good news is that it never did anything > > wrong. > > For the curious, Windows 2000 _does_ overwrite the boot sector. Also, I > was unable to make FreeBSD install the boot loader. I did every possible > combination of things, and every time it _seemed_ like it was going to > install the boot loader, but it never did until I went through an install > process... :(
There are 3 ways listed in the FAQ for this very problem. In the past, I have recommended a fourth way in a followup of mine in this list. Have you tried one of them. Which one? I restored the FreeBSD boot loader in the workstation of a friend, after he installed Windows 98. It was easy: - Boot from the installation CDROM - Interrupt the boot loader at the spinning character by hitting SPACE. - At the "boot: " prompt type 0:ad(0,a)/boot/loader - Let FreeBSD boot as usual from the disk. - Log in as root, and type: # boot0cfg -v -B /dev/ad0 [The actual device name might be different, depending on the disks you have at your system, but you get the idea.] This seems to work nicely for me for some time now, every time I need to do the "oops, windows ate my boot menu" thing. To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message