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Suse 10.0 and partitions
I am trying to install Suse 10 on one of my computers but the installation fails when trying to install Grub. this is how my setup looks like:
PRIMARY PARTITIONS
C:\ PRIMARY PARTITION WITH NTFS
D:\ PRIMARY PARTITION WITH NTFS
E:\ PRIMARY PARTITION WITH fat32
F:\ EXTENDED PARTITION WITH
Swap
ReiserFS
During the installation, it says that it doesn't accept my setup of the partitions, and therefor it can't install Grub.
I can't understand why Suse's installation media doesn't accept this partition layout? What is wrong with my setup?
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IIRC, when you're setting up a partition scheme like this, you cannot have three primary partitions. It's kind of odd and I forget exactly why it does this, but once you go over two primary partitions, it has an issue with creating logical/extended partitions. If you set one of the previous partitions to be an extended (or logical) partition, I believe you won't have any issues with your partition scheme anymore.
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i think DSwain is mistaken.
You can have 4 primary partitions...thats it.
However, if you want more, one of the first 4 partitions has to be an extended partition, thus allowing more logical partitions. Once you create logical partitions on the extended partition, the original extended partition is not usable.
Not sure this helps you, but your extended partition has 2 logical ones on it? one for swap and one for reiser?
When installing grub, where are you putting it?
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Originally Posted by happybunny
i think DSwain is mistaken.
You can have 4 primary partitions...thats it.
However, if you want more, one of the first 4 partitions has to be an extended partition, thus allowing more logical partitions. Once you create logical partitions on the extended partition, the original extended partition is not usable.
Not sure this helps you, but your extended partition has 2 logical ones on it? one for swap and one for reiser?
When installing grub, where are you putting it?
Sorry, sorry I must have worded it poorly. I meant something along those lines at least. At any rate though, for some reason I remember cfdisk not letting me make an extended partition after a third primary partition. Not sure why I'm thinking this, but I am.
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Your linux partition when seen by Grub cannot be "f", and Grub likes hd0, hd1, hd2, hd3, hd4 as a numbering schemes. Windows will not see a linux partition.
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