免费注册 查看新帖 |

Chinaunix

  平台 论坛 博客 文库
最近访问板块 发新帖
查看: 3007 | 回复: 0
打印 上一主题 下一主题

图解安装opensolaris,windows xp,ubuntu在一块硬盘上 [复制链接]

论坛徽章:
0
跳转到指定楼层
1 [收藏(0)] [报告]
发表于 2009-01-03 11:31 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览

        
                                         
       
       
       


       
       
       
       
       
       
                  
       
                           
A while after I published my blog entries on
Multibooting Solaris and Windows XP
and on
Multibooting Solaris, Ubuntu, and Windows XP
, I thought it was time for some instructions on multibooting OpenSolaris 2008.11, Kubuntu 8.10, and Windows XP.
On my laptop, a Fujitsu-Siemens S6120D (Pentium M 1.4 GHz, 512 MB
RAM, 40 GB IDE disk), I wanted to replace my old Solaris Nevada
installation by the new OpenSolaris 2008.11, and then also an old
Ubuntu 6.10 by Kubuntu 8.10.
After the OpenSolaris installation, I could boot into OpenSolaris
and Windows XP just fine. But when I installed Kubuntu (using ext3 as
the / filesystem), with the default install options, the grub that had
been installed by OpenSolaris had been overwritten by Kubutu's grub.
Even after adding old OpenSolaris entries to the new grub, booting into
OpenSolaris failed. After installing OpenSolaris again, that problem
was solved, but I could not boot into Kubuntu! The following message
was shown on screen:
  Booting 'Ubuntu 8.10, kernel 2.6.27-7-generic'
root            (hd0,6)
Filesystem type is ext2fs, partition type 0x83
kernel          /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.27-7-generic root=UUID=69585a5b-ba20-43da-984c-148c40f82a7e ro quiet splash
Error 2: Bad file or directory type
Press any key to continue...
Apparently, neither of the two grub installations could read the
root filesystem of its "opposite" operating system. The solution for
this problem in my case was to chainload the Linux grub from the
Solaris grub. I used the following procedure after installing
OpenSolaris:
  • Live boot from the Kubuntu CD and install, or use the "install to disk" menu item (2nd menu item in Kubuntu's entry screen).
  • Configure all necessary settings, as in the following screen shots:
    Start by choosing the installer's language:

    Select a city close to your desired time zone:

    Select a keyboard layout:

    In the Prepare disk space screen, a proposal like the following might be shown:

    Select the manual partitioning feature to overwrite the old Linux partition:

    The Prepare partitions screen is shown, for example:

    Customize that screen according to your needs, like the following:

    Enter data into all required fields of the Who are you? screen:

    The Ready to install screen is shown. Please DO NOT CLICK on the Install button at this point in time. Instead, click on Advanced:

    This will show up the following screen:

    Change the default Device for boot loader installation to the device name of the Linux partition as shown in the partitioning screen (in my case /dev/sda7). This is to install the boot manager not in the master boot record but in the partition in which Kubuntu is installed.

    Press OK to continue, and then Install in the screen that was shown before (Step 6 of 6). This will install Kubuntu.
  • After the installation has finished, reboot into OpenSolaris and change file
    /rpool/boot/grub/menu.lst (yes, that's the location of menu.lst in OpenSolaris 2008.11) as follows:
    Add the following lines to boot from the OpenSolaris grub into the Ubuntu grub:
    menu Kubuntu 8.10
    root (hd0,6)
    chainloader +1
    Note that (hd0,6) corresponds to partition number 7 of the first disk (=device /dev/sda7 in my case).
  • Reboot. You should now be able to boot into Kubuntu's grub and
    from there into the various menu items configured during the Kubuntu
    installation (Kubuntu, Kubuntu failsafe/single user, memtest, and even
    Windows XP).
    If it doesn't work (e.g. if you installed the Kubuntu grub
    boot manager to the master boot record), you do not have to install
    Solaris again. Just do the following to overwrite the Kubuntu grub by
    the Solaris grub:
  • Boot from the OpenSolaris 2008.11 CD.
  • After booting has finished, open a terminal window and log in as root (password is "opensolaris").
  • Run the following command:
    $ format
    Notice the device name (e.g. c3t0d0).
    Install the Solaris grub into the master boot record, using the "-m"
    option of the installgrub command. For the last argument, add s0 to the device name:
    /usr/sbin/installgrub -m /boot/grub/stage1 /boot/grub/stage2 /dev/rdsk/c3t0d0s0
    This will install the boot manager into the master boot record.
  • Reboot. You should now be able to boot into Solaris or Windows.
  • Boot into Solaris and add the Kubuntu lines as mentioned above.
  • If the Kubuntu grub had not been installed into the Kubuntu
    partition before, you might be able to do this from the Kubuntu live CD
    or a Linux rescue CD (I haven't tried that yet). If not, install
    Kubuntu again using the steps described in the first part of this blog
    entry.
    Some remarks:
    This is how the two FAT partitions look like after mounting them in OpenSolaris:
    /dev/dsk/c3d0p0:1        55958     34547     21411  62% /p/sda1
    /dev/dsk/c3d0p0:2      8481752   7093052   1388700  84% /p/sda8
    These are the /etc/vfstab entries for mounting the two FAT partitions from OpenSolaris:
    /dev/dsk/c3d0p0:1  /dev/rdsk/c3d0p0:1  /p/sda1  pcfs  2  yes  -
    /dev/dsk/c3d0p0:2  /dev/rdsk/c3d0p0:2  /p/sda8  pcfs  2  yes  -
    This is how my partition table looks like, from a Linux fdisk /dev/sda point of view:
    Disk /dev/sda: 40.0 GB, 40007761920 bytes
    255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 4864 cylinders
    Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
    Disk identifier: 0xbb88bb88
       Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
    /dev/sda1   *           1           7       56196    6  FAT16
    /dev/sda2               8        1224     9775552+  bf  Solaris
    /dev/sda3            1225        4864    29238300    5  Extended
    /dev/sda5            1225        3100    15068938+   7  HPFS/NTFS
    /dev/sda6            3101        3164      514048+  82  Linux swap / Solaris
    /dev/sda7            3165        3806     5156833+  83  Linux
    /dev/sda8            3807        4864     8498353+   b  W95 FAT32
    Please back up all your files before installing a new OS to your system!
    And as always in my blog, no guarantee, warranty, or similar, for
    anything! This is just a (hopefully error-free) documentation of how
    things worked for me. Maybe you'll find it useful.
                   
                   
                   

    本文来自ChinaUnix博客,如果查看原文请点:http://blog.chinaunix.net/u1/58855/showart_1770093.html
  • 您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

    本版积分规则 发表回复

      

    北京盛拓优讯信息技术有限公司. 版权所有 京ICP备16024965号-6 北京市公安局海淀分局网监中心备案编号:11010802020122 niuxiaotong@pcpop.com 17352615567
    未成年举报专区
    中国互联网协会会员  联系我们:huangweiwei@itpub.net
    感谢所有关心和支持过ChinaUnix的朋友们 转载本站内容请注明原作者名及出处

    清除 Cookies - ChinaUnix - Archiver - WAP - TOP