Esteemed Colleagues:
I have a computer, with an MBR-partitioned disk, that is configured to perform Legacy boot. Microsoft Windows is installed on three primary partitions, because that is what Windows does, and every other operating system on this computer must find a home for itself within the logical partitions carved out of the fourth, extended partition. I want to install FreeDOS on a logical partition. So my first question is: Does FreeDOS even support this? Many operating systems do not, and only support installation on primary partitions, and on GPT-partitioned disks. If the answer to the first question is Yes, then I can continue this narrative, otherwise the remainder of this posting is moot. I copied FD13FULL.img to a USB stick, stuck it into the above-described computer, and instructed it to boot from the USB device. The installation procedure scares me. I have already partitioned my disk and designated in my mind the logical slice onto which I want to install FreeDOS, but the installation procedure on FD13FULL.img implies that I must repartition my disk, and I am afraid to proceed, lest I irretrievably trash my entire computer. Is it possible to install FreeDOS using UNIX commands, which I know how to control? I envision doing a "mkfs -t vfat" on the logical slice of disk on which I want to install the system, mounting the USB stick on some arbitrary directory, and then populating the newly-created vfat filesystem by means of the cp and unzip commands (the packages, I noticed -- and there is a huge number of them -- are zip files, but there are also some files that are fundamental to system that are already present without having to be unzipped, which I envision simply copying over). And then finally I envision using the dd command in some way to populate the first block of the vfat filesystem with a bootloader, so that GRUB can boot FreeDOS with something along the lines of "chainloader (hd0,msdos11)+1". Or perhaps a bootloader is unnecessary, perhaps GRUB can be given the name of the FreeDOS kernel and boot directly into it without having to use the chainloader command. Is this possible? If a FreeDOS system is populated in this way, will the kernel be able to boot and then figure out how big the disk is and all the other things that will be different than they were in FD13FULL.img? If not, is there anyone reading this who is willing to gently and patiently walk me thru the native install procedure and assure me that it will not trash my hard drive? As always, thank you in advance for any and all replies. Jay F. Shachter 6424 North Whipple Street Chicago IL 60645-4111 (1-773)7613784 landline (1-410)9964737 GoogleVoice j...@m5.chicago.il.us http://m5.chicago.il.us "Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur" _______________________________________________ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user