Tony, In your Linux VM, could you give the output to `fdisk -l /dev/sda`?
Thanks On Sat, Jun 4, 2022 at 7:54 AM Tony Richardson <richardson.t...@gmail.com> wrote: > I wanted to use GRUB to boot FreeDOS. (I wanted to use it so that I could > dual-boot FreeDOS and RTEMS, but others may have different reasons.) It is > a relatively short procedure so I thought I would contribute it to the > mailing list in case others might be interested. I installed FreeDOS in a > VirtualBox virtual machine, but the procedure should work on other > virtual or physical machines. The FreeDOS fdisk does not leave enough space > before the first partition to install GRUB, so I used a Linux SystemRescue > CD (system-rescue.org) to partition the (virtual) disk. This CD has all > of the tools necessary to partition the drive, format the disk and install > GRUB. > > 1) In VirtualBox create a new 64-bit Linux machine with a 500 MB vdi-type > drive (FreeDOS.vdi). Configure the machine to boot off of the SystemRescue > CD image. (I had to give the machine 2 GB of memory to boot the CD. The > default 512 MB would not allow the machine to boot.) > > 2) Boot the new machine and create a new maximum size primary partition on > the virtual drive (/dev/sda). Change the partition type to 0x0E (a Win95 > LBA mapped partition).I use Linux fdisk (enter "fdisk /dev/sda") to do > this, but you can use any of the other disk partitioning tools on the CD > (gparted is a graphical partitioning tool). > > 3) Format the new partition by entering "mkfs.msdos /dev/sda1" (You can > alternately format the partition as part of the FreeDOS installation.) > > 4) Halt the Linux machine. (Choose the "Power off the machine" option.) > > 5) Create a new FreeDOS virtual machine. Choose to use an existing > virtual hard disk and attach the FreeDOS.vdi disk. Boot the machine from > the FreeDOS live image. Choose the "Install to Harddisk" option from the > boot menu. Install FreeDOS. You should be able to boot off the harddisk > into FreeDOS at this point. > > 6) Halt the FreeDOS virtual machine. > > 7) As part of the installation the FreeDOS master boot loader is > installed. We need to rewrite this with GRUB, so restart the Linux machine. > > 8) Mount the new partition using "mount /dev/sda1 /mnt" > > 9) Install Grub by entering "grub-install --boot-directory=/mnt/boot > /dev/sda" > > 10) Create a file named "grub.cfg" in the /mnt/boot/grub directory with > the following contents: > menuentry "FreeDOS" { > insmod chain > set root=(hd0,1) > chainloader +1 > } > > 11) Halt the Linux machine. > > You should now be able to boot the FreeDOS machine off of the hard disk. > You should see the GRUB boot menu first now. You can modify the GRUB menu > by editting the grub.cfg file in the C:\boot\grub directory. You can > delete the Linx machine, but do not delete the files associated with the > machine or you will lose your FreeDOS drive. You can move the FreeDOS.vdi > file if you want but you will need to play around with the VirtualBox Media > Manager to make it available to FreeDOS after the move. > > Tony Richardson > > _______________________________________________ > Freedos-user mailing list > Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user >
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