On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 7:44 AM, Marko Vojinovic <vvma...@gmail.com> wrote:
> "The boot loader is installed on a partition that doesn't lie entirely > > below 128 GB. The system might not boot is BIOS support only lba24 > (result > > is error 18 during install grub MBR)." > > __________________________________ > > > > What does it ('the installation process') want to say? > > Ok, you need to learn a bit or two about booting a PC. Dual-booting is a > nontrivial thing to setup, so you need to be aware of what is actually > going > on inside. > > You want to read about that on > > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Booting#Boot_sequence_on_standard_PC_.28IBM- > PC_compatible.29 > I am going to read this all as soon as I get the time. > When you turn on a computer, the very first thing that happens is that the > motherboard oscillator clock stats ticking. This invokes a piece of > hardware > that sends a reset signal to the processor. The processor than resets > itself > and starts executing commands from a fixed predetermined position in > memory. > This is where the bios resides. > > The bios gets loaded, does a bunch of initialization and self-testing > stuff, > and eventually looks up the MBR (master boot record) of your hard disk, to > load an operating system. > > The MBR is located at the very beginning of the hard drive, and is 512 > bytes > long. It contains the partition table of the disk, and a "stage 1" > bootloader > --- a small piece of code which knows "where to look" for an operating > system > to load. Now comes the catch --- this piece of code is very > size-constrained, > so it relies on bios routines to access the remainder of the hard disk. The > bios, however, may be old, and not have built-in support to access the > whole > space of the 250 GB hard drive. Or maybe it can. It depends on your > particular > bios, and the SuSE installation cannot check whether bios is capable of > this > or not. > Oh I see. > In the end, you get the warning that the "stage 2" bootloader, which is to > be > positioned at the beginning of the /dev/sda6 partition, might be out of > reach > of bios. If it is, your system would fail to boot the SuSE installation. > Windows would be bootable no problem, because its "stage2" bootloader is at > the beginning of the /dev/sda1, which is on the "near end" of the hard > drive, > and thus certainly within the reach of bios. > What earlier I used to think is that, "BIOS only send the instructions to the boot-loader (probably or whatever it sends the signal to) to just boot, BIOS has not such a bigger memory to have the hard-disk, so hard-disk is always beyond the hands of BIOS, but rather BIOS just sends the signal that ***IT*** should be booted and ***THAT*** gets booted. Of course, once the OS gets booted, from which location? > it can see the whole disk with no > problems, because the OS kernel (both the Windows and Linux one) is much > more > powerful than the bios, and does not rely on the bios to access the disk. > Okay. You have two options: > > (1) To look up the docs/specifications of your bios version on the > Internet, > and read wheter or not it supports large hard drives (and how large). > (2) To experiment --- proceed with the installation of SuSE and hope that > bios > can access the disk that far. My bet is that it can, since Ubuntu had no > problems booting from the same place on the disk. ;-) > You are absolutely correct and I got booted with SUSE, installed it with all that default options and it got booted! > > Now the partition table (which came BY DEFAULT, at the step at which the > > above error (in red) came) was as follows: > > __________________________________ > > > > /dev/sda 232.89 GB > > /dev/sda1 116.88 GB HPFS/NTFS NTFS /windows/c > > /dev/sda1 116.01 GB Extended > > /dev/sad5 4.75 GB Linux swap Swap Swap > > /dev/sda6 20.00 GB F Linux native Ext4 / > > /dev/sda7 91.25 GB F Linux native Ext4 /home > > __________________________________ > > > > First line: Well, /dev/sda is the whole of hard disk and its capacity is > > 232.89 GB. Its well understood. But when I bought, the vendor told me the > > capacity of 250 GB, so remaining (250-232.89) GB=17.11 GB are where, I > > don't know. > > Q: How many meters are there in a kilometer? > A: 1024 --- ask any programmer! :-) > > You want to read about that on > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byte#Unit_multiples > > When a disk manufacturer says 1GB, they typically mean 1 000 000 000 bytes, > which is 1000^3. When an OS says 1 GB (or more precisely 1GiB), it means > 1 073 741 824 bytes, which is 1024^3. Hence the difference. > > Also, some of the space on the disk is used up for filesystem data (and its > backups), some of it may be reserved for root (for administration > purposes), > etc. > Ah well. > > Second line: /dev/sda1 is the Windows partition, and I guess it is > taking > > number '1' since it is the default boot option...? It has been formated > by > > NTFS file system as shown clearly. > > It takes a number 1 because it takes the first position on the disk, > physically > speaking (it's on the "near end" of the disk). Boot order has nothing to do > with this. > Okay. > > Third line: /dev/sda1 extended? Is it windows only? If yes, why its > size is > > 116.01 GB? and not 116.88 GB (which is in the line just above it). What > > does it mean? > > I believe that wolud be /dev/sda2, rather than /dev/sda1. > Yeah, you are correct, it was /dev/sda2 (confirmed in the installation). > You want to read about that on > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_partitioning#PC_partition_types > > In short, there can be at most *four* primary partitions on a disk. If > there > is need for more, one of these four is declared as "extended", and is > chopped > up into a larger number of "logical" partitions. In your case, there is one > primary partition (/dev/sda1), and another primary partition (/dev/sda2) > which > is declared extended, and contains several other logical partitions inside > it. > > Its total size is 116.01 GB, which is the space divided between swap, / and > /home. The other primary partition, /dev/sda1, is used by Windows (the C: > drive), and it is 116.88 GB in size. > > The 116 for sda2 has nothing to do with the 116 for sda1, it's a > coincindence > that they are almost equal in size, dividing your 250 GB disk in two almost > equal pieces. It could have been different, depending on the size of the > Windows partition. > Right, okay, I got the idea. > > Fourth line: /dev/sda5 Okay Linux swap, understood and it is separate > > partition. I don't know where /dev/sda2, /dev/sda3, /dev/sda4 have gone?? > > > > >From '1' it has jumped to -->> '5'...! > > The dev/sda2 is the extended partition, and /dev/sda3 and /dev/sda4 would > be > 3rd and 4th primary partitions, if you had them. But you don't --- you have > only two primary partitions, sda1 and sda2, the latter being declared > extended. It contains several logical partitions, which are numbered sda5 > and > onwards. > Okay. > Trust me, it would be an even bigger mess if logical and primary partitions > were mixed up in numbering. Don't worry about it. > > Incidentally, in principle you could customize your partition setup, and > instead set up four primary partitions, like this: > > /dev/sda1 for Windows > /dev/sda2 for Linux / > /dev/sda3 for Linux /home > /dev/sda4 for Linux swap > > That way all partitions would be primary, and there would be no extended > partition. However, if you later choose to divide one of those partitions > into > two or more, you're out of luck --- you would have to back up the whole > partition, delete it and create an extended one in its place. > Oh I see. > Fifth line: /dev/sda6 is the root, since at the last symbol '/' is coming > > and again its a separate partition. But why it is calling Linux native? > And > > why there is coming a 'F' written just after 20.00 GB, what is it > > representing? > > You want to read more about that on > > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem#File_systems_and_operating_systems > > It is called Linux native because the filesystem which is to be put on it > is > ext4, rather than fat32 or ntfs, which Windows could use. The "F" symbol is > the mark that this partition is going to be formatted during the install, > deleting all previous data that may be on it (the Ubuntu OS, in your case). > Well, got. > > -Boot from MBR is disabled (enable) > > -Boot from "/" partition is disabled (enable) > > __________________________________ > > > > I don't know WHY to enable any one of the above options or to enable both > > or to not touch............? And what does they mean (the above options). > > > The installer is asking you where you want to put the stage1 bootloader. > There > can be several stage1 bootloaders on the disk, and they can be configured > in a > "chain" --- the first one is always in MBR, and it redirects the booting > to the > one that is on /dev/sda1, or the one on /dev/sda6, or elsewhere. That's how > you get to choose which OS to boot when you turn on the computer. > > The SuSE can set up the MBR bootloader and/or the /dev/sda6 bootloader for > you, or skip it if some other OS is already using the MBR (that would be > Ubuntu, in your case). > SUSE would automatically delete the MBR (which right now points to Ubuntu) and would set the other defaults.....in it? > Since you are going to delete Ubuntu, its bootloader in MBR will fail to > work. > You want to let SuSE set up the MBR, and leave the / partition alone. SuSE > will take care of itself, and it will take care of Windows via chainloading > its bootloader on /dev/sda1. You *don't* want to leave Ubuntu's bootloader > in > the MBR. > This is a small typical, what I got means I should not change this because Ubuntu is in MBR and we are going to delete the Ubuntu, so enabling it would/could make it some problem...? > If you instead wanted to install SuSE alongside Windows *and* Ubuntu, you > would have more than one way to answer this question (and it could get > quite > complicated). When setting up multiboot environments, you *always* want to > be > aware of what you are doing when configuring the bootloader(s), and *need* > to > learn and understand how it all works together. One wrong choice can render > the whole machine nonbootable. The system by mistake also if becomes Non-bootable, as in the case just in above para, would it permanently become non-bootable or we could re-write the hard-disk from scratch....(just in doubt...for future experimentation....) However, in my case it is just dual booted, working. > The dual-boot is the simplest of these configurations, but still you need > to have a good idea what you are doing. :-) > Yeah. > Btw, unwillingness to learn these things is one of the reasons why some > people > opt to using virtual machines instead of multiboot environments (of course, > this is not the only reason, there are other pro's and con's...). > I didn't go in virtual environment only because I thought it would be much better option to do... Given that you are a beginner, I can suggest to keep / and /home separated, > with additional partitions for swap and Windows. Choose / to be 20GB, > choose > swap to be 2GB (it can't hurt, since you have 2GB of physical RAM), and > choose > /home to take up all space that remains on the disk, since that is where > all > your user data will reside (documents, music, movies, etc.... you want it > to > be big enough).Later on, if you choose to reinstall Linux, you just format > the / partition, > and point the new installation to use the old /home (without formatting it), > thus keeping all your data, customizations etc. across installs. There can > be > some nontrivial gotcha's there, but in general it will work better than > just > having one big / partititon. > This is what the default openSUSE was going to do and I let it go.... However, it is a very basic question but we can boot (or not) from /home since it is a separate partition...(like /dev/sda1, windows)....? Many new concepts, really good to know. The only problem with me is that I am in some other job, so get less time. BUT I liked Linux, anyhow, it is a great place. I wonder why Windows was governing the world during a long era and people readily pay for it.... though Linux is such a great environment....! Isn't it? -- THX
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