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May 12th, 2002, 02:39 PM
#1
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Windows is slow when Linux is on another disk
It wasnt like this before when I had to boot up, but now whenever I run windows it takes 10 mins to load if the other disk, containing redhat7.2, is there.
I made a file of the mbr and wrote over the windows one, then rewrote the windows one (this worked before) but this time it doesnt work.
Anyone else have this problem?
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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May 12th, 2002, 03:44 PM
#2
Frenzied Member
Nope, never had that problem because of duel boot but I have had it happen and you just need to reinstall windows
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May 12th, 2002, 03:56 PM
#3
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
I just did and its still slow. The setup was slow too.
It only happens on the bootup. Once everything is up and running, it is normal.
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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May 12th, 2002, 03:58 PM
#4
Fanatic Member
i timed mine (i am completely obsessed by a fast startup time) and excpulign th etime it takes to select windows on the boot loader the boot time was exactly the same as before linux. But i had them all on one disk which could have made a difference
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May 12th, 2002, 03:59 PM
#5
Frenzied Member
Yeha, it used to just sit there and do nothing for a while, stay at the same status point but the little bar was still spinning around. Linux shouldnt have an effect on it.
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May 12th, 2002, 04:01 PM
#6
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Also, windows doesnt show the E:\ drive (the linux drive) anymore in "my computer"....
It is definately slower; like 5 mins to load.....
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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May 12th, 2002, 06:10 PM
#7
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
I disabled the drive and it works now - linux and win2k.
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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May 12th, 2002, 06:24 PM
#8
Fanatic Member
Originally posted by markman
Also, windows doesnt show the E:\ drive (the linux drive) anymore in "my computer"....
Because the linux native is on an EXT2 partitioning scheme, that means that it isn't proprietary, MS obviously doens't like supporting stuff it doesn't own so they don't support reading from the linux swap, it just doesn't show up in windows, if you partition your hard drive, it won't show up as the full size it show up as the full size minus the size you stuck away.
Linux will read fat32/fat but NTFS is quite secure, a hard nut to crack
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May 12th, 2002, 06:50 PM
#9
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
how can I get linux to read hda1? do I mount it? step by step please
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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May 12th, 2002, 07:09 PM
#10
Fanatic Member
it is a fat 32 right? if it is NTFS then you can't (NTFS is quite secure) anyways you would make a dir to hold th emount then go
mount - t vfat /dev/hda1 /whatever the hell your dir is called
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May 12th, 2002, 07:53 PM
#11
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
/whatever the hell your dir is called
what should it be?
is there a way to mount it at runtime so I dont have to every time i use it?
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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May 12th, 2002, 08:37 PM
#12
Fanatic Member
Look in /etc/fstab and follow the format of the file systems already there to add a new one. It doesn't matter what you call the directory (I have mine as /windows for simplicity), but just make sure to unmount it first if you want to delete the folder, otherwise there goes Windows
Alcohol & calculus don't mix.
Never drink & derive.
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May 12th, 2002, 09:04 PM
#13
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May 13th, 2002, 10:55 AM
#14
Black Cat
Make sure Windows is running the HDD is DMA mode, not PIO mode - check the IDE controller's properties in device manager.
Josh
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I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.
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May 13th, 2002, 12:01 PM
#15
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
or maybe ill just use disks to get windows files so I dont accidentally delete anything
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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Jul 17th, 2002, 07:44 PM
#16
Thread Starter
Frenzied Member
Originally posted by Wynd
Look in /etc/fstab and follow the format of the file systems already there to add a new one. It doesn't matter what you call the directory (I have mine as /windows for simplicity), but just make sure to unmount it first if you want to delete the folder, otherwise there goes Windows
Bringing up an old thread, I still want to access a fat32 drive. However, Im worried about deleting windows. What exactly do you mean by this? What do I have to do to prevent deleting it?
retired member. Thanks for everything 
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Jul 25th, 2002, 04:35 PM
#17
Frenzied Member
If you dont want to delete windows, just dont try to delete the directory that you mount the drive to. If you want to delete the dierctory at some future point, just remember to unmount the dirve first.
Z.
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