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Operating Systems SCO xp/sco 5.0.7 dual boot issues Post 302114171 by stay0ut on Thursday 12th of April 2007 10:40:14 PM
Old 04-12-2007
Computer Rudimentary question--possibly where I am going wrong

Rudimentary question,
Quote:
Originally Posted by jgt
Make sure that both the unix boot partition and the xp partition start before cylinger 1023 on the hard drive.
but, how would I make both see the same partition that's <1023 cylinders? (@30megs) . . . I've worked with Microsoft products for a long time, linux and bsd distros for the last year or so, but never together on the same installation.

The problem I think I'm running into is the SCO fdisk and how to get both XP and SCO to boot off of that first 1023 cylinders. What formatting should be used for the boot partition? Should the boot partition be made active.

The way I normally install the system is image xp onto the hardrive, move the partition, and reboot to make sure xp boots. I then install SCO, and during the hardrive initialization process, have unix use the rest of the disk.

My goal is ease of use for a shop floor technician to use both old licensed SCO apps and our current supply of Windows apps. So, the bootos function of SCO would be best for the dual boot purpose.

BTW---I Like SCO--two days of being paid to learn it even makes it more appealing.

Thanks for your assistance
 

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scrounge-ntfs(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 					  scrounge-ntfs(8)

NAME
scrounge-ntfs -- helps retrieve data from corrupted NTFS partitions SYNOPSIS
scrounge-ntfs -l disk scrounge-ntfs -s disk scrounge-ntfs [-m mftoffset] [-c clustersize] [-o outdir] disk start end DESCRIPTION
scrounge-ntfs is a utility that can rescue data from corrupted NTFS partitions. It writes the files retrieved to another working file system. Certain information about the partition needs to be known in advance. The -l mode is meant to be run in advance of the data corruption, with the output stored away in a file. This allows scrounge-ntfs to recover data reliably. See the 'NOTES' section below for recover info when this isn't the case. OPTIONS
The options are as follows: -c The cluster size (in sectors). When not specified a default of 8 is used. -l List partition information for a drive. This will only work when the partition table for the given drive is intact. -m When recovering data this specifies the location of the MFT from the beginning of the partition (in sectors). If not specified then no directory information can be used, that is, all rescued files will be written to the same directory. -o Directory to put rescued files in. If not specified then files will be placed in the current directory. -s Search disk for partition information. (Not implemented yet). disk The raw device used to access the disk which contains the NTFS partition to rescue files from. eg: '/dev/hdc' start The beginning of the NTFS partition (in sectors). end The end of the NTFS partition (in sectors) NOTES
If you plan on using this program sucessfully you should prepare in advance by storing a copy of the partition information. Use the -l option to do this. Eventually searching for disk partition information will be implemented, which will solve this problem. When only one partition exists on a disk or you want to rescue the first partition there are ways to guess at the sector sizes and MFT loca- tion. See the scrounge-ntfs web page for more info: http://memberwebs.com/swalter/software/scrounge/ AUTHOR
Stef Walter <stef@memberwebs.com> scrounge-ntfs June 1, 2019 scrounge-ntfs
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