On Mon, 31 Jan 2005 16:06:39 +0000, Mark Ovens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hehe! I did it the hard way; I manually recreated the partition table - > 3 partitions! In fact.....[roots around in drawer]......yes, still got > the printout of the spreadsheet I used to calculated the start and end > CHS values - don't know why, the disk was replaced ages ago :-) Hehe! How did u manually recreate the partition table? U had the sizes and sectors etc stored somewhere? On my previous machine, I used to have fdisk listings of all my disks as a printout -- coz I've done this kind of goofups many a times, and so usually have been careful to keep a listing of the sector values etc. But this time, I was on my parents' machine, and since I hadn't really started using it big time, I was careless enough not to take a precaution like this. (But I guess I was not thaaat careless enough to not take backups either, hehe!) I was lucky to find this demo program called Active Partition UnEraser or something. Being demo, it would only show me the starting and ending sectors of all the partitions -- but that was fine with me coz once I got those values, it was just a matter of noting them down and then booting into Linux (coz that's what I had apart from FreeBSD) and recreating the tables using its fdisk program. :)) > IRCC, boot0 is the MBR and boot1 is the boot sector (of the FreeBSD > partition (slice)) and they only ontain info about the local disk, i.e. > _relative_ info in effect, so if FreeBSD is on your second disk and you > copy boot1 to C:\BOOTSECT.BSD and add an entry for it in BOOT.INI then > NTLDR has know way of knowing that it refers to the second HDD and so > can't boot because the info doesn't match the layout of the first HDD. > Remember boot0 and boot1 are restricted to 512bytes - one sector. That > is the reason as far as remember. Oh yeah ... doh! Silly me! Ofcourse boot1 contains the info relative to the FreeBSD disk, so copying it across to C:\BOOTSECT.BSD wont help! Silly me! :)) So that's why copying boot1 and loader didn't help -- coz they were all relative to the FreeBSD disk. And copying boot0 too didnt help coz of the MBR re-writing thingy. :p What magic does BootPart do, I still wonder! I mean, if its just extracting the bootsectors as the program says, then an alternative way of extracting (like "dd" etc) too should work! But they dont -- meaning, BootPart does more than just extracting, I guess. -- -- Rakhesh [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"