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Alan Searchwell bigduppy at hotmail.com
Mon Oct 19 04:42:41 UTC 2009


I always use the advanced options in the installer to install grub to the root partition of the distro I'm installing. Since I'm dual booting with windows, I then use grub4dos to boot into linux. This gives me a quick and easy method to restore the ability to boot linux after a Windows re-install since all that is required to set up grub4dos is to copy a file (grldr) to the Windows boot partition and edit Windows startup menus to launch that file.

Today I did an installation that had a weird partition table. The entries  were:

/dev/sda1   *           1        1275    10241406    7  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda2            1276        7476    49809532+   f  W95 Ext'd (LBA)
/dev/sda5            1276        6024    38146311    7  HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda6            6025        7269    10000431   83  Linux
/dev/sda7            7270        7476     1662696   82  Linux swap / Solaris

Notice, no sda3 or sda4. When I chose the advanced options during install, I was given the option of installing grub to sda, sda1 (Microsoft Windows XP Professional), sda5 or sda6. Since I was expecting the Linux partition to be sda4, I got confused and thought that sda6 must be the swap partition (dumb me) so I installed grub to sda5. This has made my NTFS partition inaccessible with no easy way to correct this mistake.

The installer is smart enough to know that grub can't be installed to swap space so, the swap partition is not offered as an option for installing grub. From today's experience NTFS partitions are not suitable for installing grub so they should not be offered as options either.  IMHO Ubuntu's installer does a fine job of saving users from themselves and this little extra check would take that protection one step further.
 		 	   		  
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