In article <423016d0$0$29282$ XXXX@XXXXX.COM >,
The process I use:
0 - Set BIOS to allow blowing away the recovery partition (if
necessary)
1 - Boot Linux rescue disk, delete all partitions, create primary
partition for XP install (partition 1 of desired size).
2 - Run XP recovery from CD's
3 - When recovery fails (boots to blinking cursor), boot Linux
rescue disk and rewrite MBR with LILO.
4 - Finish XP recovery. Let XP "adjust" partitioning as required
(e.g., on my X31 with 7K60 HD, Linux fdisk defaulted to 255
heads, 63 sectors while XP insisted on 240 heads/63 sectors).
5 - Create all desired partitions using XP disk manager, including
partitions for Linux, swap, and hibernation. No need to format
any partitions other than those XP will access.
6 - Boot Linux rescue disk, change type of Linux partitions to the
appropriate values (Linux and Linux swap). To avoid warning
messages, go to expert mode and set the disk geometry to match
that used by XP first.
7 - Install Hibernation partition if you're using one (from floppy
boot). (I've found APM currently uses about 1/3 the power of
ACPI when suspended to RAM, although ACPI suspend to RAM finally
works).
8 - Install Linux.
9 - Have fun!
--
Vincent C Jones, Consultant Expert advice and a helping hand
Networking Unlimited, Inc. for those who want to manage and
Tenafly, NJ Phone: 201 568-7810 control their networking destiny
http://www.networkingunlimited.com