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Hack 87 Multiboot with Third-Party Utilities

figs/moderate.gif figs/hack87.gif

Use a third-party partitioning and boot utility to extend multiboot support beyond DOS and Windows.

A third-party boot management utility provides simpler configuration, significantly more options, and a friendlier user experience than FDISK and an NT-based text menu for operating system selection. These utilities are intended to be installed on a working Windows system before you add any other operating systems. Setting up partition and boot managers is not well documented in the two most popular products: Symantec's PartitionMagic and BootMagic combination, and V-Com's Partition Commander and System Commander.

To use these utilities effectively, you must install them on the first active partition of the first hard drive, and that partition should be FAT-32 and boot to DOS. Installing them on the first partition running DOS or Windows 9x allows them control over the boot process.

The third-party utilities cannot properly manage boot control if you add them after you've set up an NT-based multiboot configuration. This is because the NT-based boot loader (NTLDR) and menu (BOOT.INI) take over the boot process for the first drive and partition no matter what initial or additional operating systems or boot managers are installed. In such a scenario, you will see the third-party boot manager's menu with only one selection, typically DOS/Windows 9x. When you make that selection, the NTLDR process starts and presents the operating system selection from the contents of BOOT.INI, from which you choose DOS/Windows 9x or Windows NT, 2000, or XP.

9.4.1 Plan Ahead

Start with one or more hard drives that are large enough to be partitioned to hold the operating systems and data you will be installing and using. If you're using DOS 6.22 or Windows 95 (Retail or OSR1), remember that they use the FAT-16 filesystem, which limits partition size to 2 GB. Windows 2000 or later operating systems cannot reside on FAT-16 filesystems. You can start with DOS, then add another partition for Windows 95, another for Windows 95 OSR2, another for Windows 98, then 98SE, then Me, and so on.

It is recommended that the first partition on the first drive should be partitioned and formatted as a FAT-32 volume with Windows 95 OSR2, 98, or 98SE. If you require the security of NTFS under NT/2000/XP, these operating systems will have to be installed in a separate partition and formatted for NTFS. Then, if you have files under NTFS that you need to share with an OS that uses FAT-32, you'll have to copy those files to the unsecured FAT partition or use [Hack #89].

If you are going to share datafiles between this DOS/Windows installation and other operating systems, make the partition large enough to hold all of your DOS and Windows 9x applications and the shared data.

Subsequent partitions may be partitioned for the NTFS filesystem. NTFS is much more efficient and secure, but native access to NTFS partitions is limited to Windows NT, 2000, or XP. Assuming you choose to follow these recommendations, the steps in the following sections will take you through adding Windows 2000 or XP to your system with PartitionMagic and System Commander, respectively.

If you add or have a second hard drive to your system after these utilities are installed and that drive is not recognized, you will have to boot to the original installation operating system and set the hardware options to allow recognition of the new drive. Even after this, partitioning software may not allow you to select the second drive as a target for a new OS installation but will let you set the drive to Active so you can proceed with the install.


9.4.2 Adding a New Operating System with PartitionMagic

PartitionMagic and its companion program BootMagic require separate configurations to support installing and booting additional operating systems.

  1. Install PartitionMagic and BootMagic under Windows on the first partition of the first hard drive. Configure the boot manager so it is active and restart the system. The boot manager should appear after the Power On Self Test but before the original operating system starts.

  2. Accept the selection to boot into your original operating system. When Windows is running, start BootMagic.

  3. Select Add and configure BootMagic for the additional operating system(s) you will be installing. BootMagic does not need to know where the additional operating system is located. Exit BootMagic.

  4. Start PartitionMagic. Select "Install another operating system" from the menu choices at the left, as in Figure 9-11. Note the instructions that appear and then click Next.

    Figure 9-11. PartitionMagic provides options for changing partitions and adding a new operating system
    figs/pchk_0911.gif


  5. Choose the operating system you wish to install, as in Figure 9-12, and then click Next .

    Figure 9-12. Selecting which new operating system to install with PartitionMagic
    figs/pchk_0912.gif


  6. Choose the location (disk and partition) for your new operating system, as shown in Figures Figure 9-13 and Figure 9-14, and then click Next.

    Figure 9-13. Selecting the location for a new operating system in PartitionMagic
    figs/pchk_0913.gif


    Figure 9-14. Selecting which partition will provide disk space for a new OS in PartitionMagic
    figs/pchk_0914.gif


  7. Set the desired partition size, label, and filesystem type, as in Figure 9-15, click Next, and then indicate if you will be installing the new operating system now or later (Figure 9-16) and click Next.

    Figure 9-15. Setting partition parameters in PartitionMagic
    figs/pchk_0915.gif


    Figure 9-16. PartitionMagic lets you defer the installation of a new operating system
    figs/pchk_0916.gif


  8. Review and confirm the changes to be made, as in Figure 9-17, and click Finish.

    Figure 9-17. Reviewing changes PartitionMagic will make
    figs/pchk_0917.gif


  9. Click Apply in the lower left corner, shown in Figure 9-18, and PartitionMagic will reconfigure your disk drives and prepare the system for the new installation.

    Figure 9-18. PartitionMagic with changes pending for a new OS installation
    figs/pchk_0918.gif


  10. If you are installing Windows 2000 or XP, insert the installation CD in your CD-ROM drive and restart the system. Watch for the "boot from CD" prompt and press any key to start the OS install. If you cannot boot from your CD-ROM (for Windows 9x-Me installations), let PartitionMagic come up and then choose to boot from your A: drive. Let the system boot with a DOS diskette with CD support. At the DOS prompt begin the new installation from the CD—typically with this command (replace D with the drive letter of your CD-ROM):

     
    
    D
    
    :\i386\winnt.exe

  11. Proceed through the Windows installation as usual. When the installation prompts to restart, remove the bootable diskette if you used one and then restart the system.

  12. When the BootMagic menu appears, select the new operating system you are installing. The installation process will boot and proceed from that point.

  13. When the installation is complete, remove any diskettes or CDs from their drives and restart the system. Your OS selections should work as expected, though you may wish to edit the BOOT.INI [Hack #94] file for any of your NT/2000/XP installations to set the TIMEOUT= value to 0 and make sure the DEFAULT= setting indicates the new operating system so you do not have to wait through these delays.

9.4.3 Adding a New Operating System with System Commander

V-Com's System Commander is a pioneer in supporting multiple operating systems on one PC. It is an effective but not always intuitive program to use, so I'll take you through the steps of adding Windows 2000 to a system running Windows 98.

The instructions given in both the Commander program and on V-Com's web site are incomplete and may seem misleading for this installation scenario. Working around the pitfalls is discussed in the steps below.


  1. Install System Commander under Windows. Configure it so it is enabled and restart the system. The boot manager should appear after the Power On Self Test but before the original operating system starts. (If your mouse does not work in these screens, you can navigate and select with the Tab, Space, arrow, and Enter keys.)

  2. At the upper left in the menu bar, select the OS Wizard.

  3. Select "New installation" and then click Next.

  4. The default new OS selection is Windows, so click Next.

  5. Select the specific OS you will be installing (Windows 2000) and click Next.

  6. Choose New install and then click Next.

  7. For the location of the new OS, select "Isolated by itself" and click Next.

  8. Select the drive and partition size you would like to use for the new OS and click Next. Follow the prompts to proceed. System Commander will make any necessary partition changes, then provide a set of directions for installing the new operating system. At this point, the new partition is marked Active and will be the target for your installation. If you have selected Windows 2000 or XP, the instructions tell you to have your bootable installation CD ready and insert it when prompted.

    Your system must support booting from CD or you will need a bootable DOS diskette with CD-ROM support

  9. Insert the installation CD in your CD-ROM drive and restart the system. Watch for the "boot from CD" prompt and press any key to start the OS install. If you cannot boot from your CD-ROM, let System Commander come up and then select booting from your A: drive. Let the system boot with a DOS diskette with CD support. At the DOS prompt begin the new installation from the CD—typically with this command (replace D with the drive letter of your CD-ROM):

     D
    
    :\i386\winnt.exe

  10. After the first pass of the installation, you will be prompted to remove the boot diskette and restart, so do so now. System Commander will start and advise that it needs to update partition records—let it do so.

  11. You will then see the OS Selection menu. Choose the operating system being installed, in this case Windows 2000. The Windows boot menu will appear and you will need to accept/select Windows 2000 installation.

  12. Proceed through the installation process. In the second setup screen you will see a selection for the drive/partition as the target for this installation. Drive E: will be the disk/partition of your prior OS and drive C: will be the active target for this installation—select this to proceed.

  13. You will be asked to reboot once during the installation, then you will receive the boot sector/partition update prompt from System Commander, and then the OS Selection menu again. Select Windows 2000 and proceed.

  14. Follow the remaining Windows installation instructions, fill in the information required, and complete the new installation. At the prompt to restart, you are finished and can use System Commander to select your desired operating system. Your OS selections should work as expected, though you may wish to edit the BOOT.INI [Hack #94] file for any of your NT/2000/XP installations to set the TIMEOUT= value to 0 and make sure the DEFAULT= setting indicates the new operating system so you do not have to wait through these delays.

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         Main Menu
    PC Hacks
    Table of Contents
    Copyright
    Credits
    Preface
    Chapter 1. Basic System Board Hacks
    Chapter 2. Basic System Board Setup
    Chapter 3. CPU Hacks
    Chapter 4. Memory Hacks
    Chapter 5. Disk Hacks
    Chapter 6. Disk Drive Performance Hacks
    Chapter 7. Video Hacks
    Chapter 8. I/O Device Hacks
    Chapter 9. Boot-Up Hacks
    Introduction: Hacks #85-94
    Hack 85 Make a Bare Disk Bootable
    Hack 86 Configure a Multiboot System
    Hack 87 Multiboot with Third-Party Utilities
    Hack 88 Speed up Operating System Installation and Maintenance
    Hack 89 Access NTFS Files from Other Operating Systems
    Hack 90 Give Your XP Installation Access to the Recovery Console
    Hack 91 Hack the Windows 95/98/Me DOS Startup
    Hack 92 Hack the MS-DOS Configuration File
    Hack 93 Hack the MS-DOS Startup File
    Hack 94 Hack the Windows NT/2000/XP Boot Loader
    Chapter 10. Configuring a New PC
    Colophon
    Index


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