On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 06:58:16AM +0000, Mick wrote: > On Wednesday 17 February 2010 01:12:08 Peter Humphrey wrote: > > On Monday 15 February 2010 23:45:23 Mick wrote: > > > If I were to [tell] GRUB to chainload W7 [which} should I point it > > > to? Dell's partition 2 which has the boot flag, or the main W7 OS > > > partition 3? > > > > The one with W7 on it, I should have thought, as that's the one you want > > to start. Why not just try it? And when you find out which partition is > > which, why not set the bootable flag on the right one? I.e. the one with > > grub in it. > > I am not sure that I would want to do this. I recall that MSWindows used to > be and it possible still is rather sensitive with needing the boot flag on > its > partition. Linux on the other hand is a more advanced OS which does not care > where the boot flag is.
If you were to go with the GRUB -> W7 route, I don't think just trying out the two configurations (don't change boot flags, just try each partition) would've hurt. The worst that I can imagine is an error thrown about OS not found. > Nope. I mean use the Windows 7 bootloader as the primary bootloader to > chainload GRUB from the Gentoo partition. The MSWindows stays in the MBR as > it is now, the GRUB is installed in the Gentoo /boot partition. MSWindows > bootloader chainloads GRUB. > I wish you good luck with your project. > PPS. I am making some progress with this (at least in terms of googling) and > will report back as soon as I have achieved this MSWindows --> chainloading -- > > Gentoo thing. Please do write a page on the Wiki (or at least a summary of what you did to this mailing list). This will be some handy information to have. Cheers, W -- Willie W. Wong ww...@math.princeton.edu Data aequatione quotcunque fluentes quantitae involvente fluxiones invenire et vice versa ~~~ I. Newton