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Due to some booting problems with Windows Vista Home Premium
1. I unplugged the power and data cables to the SATA 1 HD where Windows Vista HP 32-bit was previously installed 2. left only the power and data cables plugged to the SATA 2 HD where opensuse linux 11.1 64-bit was previously installed 3. ran Parted Magic 4.2 (2009) and deleted the three (3) opensuse linux 11.1 X64 partitions 4. installed again opensuse 11.1 X64 When I entered into the BIOS and changed the booting devices order to boot from the SATA 2 HD, the following message appeared onscreen BOOTMGR is missing Press Ctrl+Alt+Del to restart However, I can boot opensuse linux thru its Installation DVD, and it will work well. I ran Parted Magic and it gives the following readings ...............................................Mou nt point...........Flags /dev/sda1 ..... linux-swap /dev/sda2 ..... ext3.............../media/sda2...........boot /dev/sda3...... ext3.............../media/sda3 The motherboard is an Asus M3N-HT Deluxe Series, and the CPU is an AMD AM2+ 7750 Dual-Core processor. I will appreciate your kind assistance in knowing the code lines that should be entered into the appropriate oss linux 11.1 files. Once things become stable I will work then with the other o/s switching from the 32 to the 64-bit version. While working with this the booting problems arose. |
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I have not performed the test that you recommend but I will let you know what happens when I do it. Thanks again for your valuable feedback. |
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So he has one HD plugged in which is SATA 2.
It housed a previous version of openSuse. When you did the install, was this a New Installation and the installer reformatted the drive? Or did you choose the update option? It would seem very odd to me if you did a New Installation that reformmatted the drive that you would get that message. Have you run the repair option off of the DVD and checked the install & boot loader? I do not have enough details on your bios to say anything has caused the problem. One thing I do which someone could probably come up with a better way, if I have an Linux install problem that is partition related, I throw in a Windows disc and do a full NTFS format, power the unit down when it completes before it starts copying files, and then I start my Linux install.
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System: IntelCore 2 Quad 6600, Asus P5Q Deluxe,8 GB Corsair XMS, NVidia GTS 250 512Mb OS: OpenSuse 11.1 x64; 2.6.27...; KDE 4.3 Dual-boot w/ Windows 7 RC |
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