[CentOS] Dual booting centos 4.1 and Solaris 10 express build 15
mohamed yusuf
myusuf32 at yahoo.ca
Thu Jul 7 18:05:45 UTC 2005
--- Aleksandar Milivojevic <alex at milivojevic.org>
wrote:
> mohamed yusuf wrote:
> > I have been trying to multiboot centos 4.1 and the
> > current solaris express build 15. I have two hard
> > drive s, the first one ( hd0 ) devoted to CentOS
> 4.1
> > and windows xp (no problems). The second drive
> (hd1)
> > for Solaris 10 only. I tried to boot solaris from
> > CentOS grub and got the following error messages:
> >
> > Booting Solaris 10
> > root(hd1,0)
> > Filesystem type unknown, partition type 0Xbf
> > kernel /platform/i86pc/multiboot
> > Error 17: can not mount selected partition
> > press any key to continue....
>
> Grub knows how to read BSD UFS type of file system,
> but I'm not sure
> about Solaris file system. Solaris UFS is basically
> BSD UFS with some
> extra stuff. You said you were able to boot it
> before. Some of the
> reasons for failure could be:
>
> - wrong partition type
> - logging enabled on Solaris UFS
> - different version of Solaris UFS
> - Solaris kernel stored outside of BIOS
> addressable disk area
>
> Also, I'm not sure if you want to have makeactive
> and chainloader
> options if Grub is loading kernel directly.
I have taken out makeactive and chainloader + no
success
> One thing to check is how disk is organized. I
> remember that Solaris
> likes to have an partition for itself, install
> Solaris disklabel onto
> it, and then sub-partition it into 8 partitions (so
> basically you get
> partitions inside partitions, something like
> extended partition in
> DOS/Windows). Somehow I doubt Grub would be able to
> read that.
> If you simply can't make Grub to mount Solaris
> partition, and load the
> kernel, your best bet would be installing Solaris
> boot loader onto first
> partition of second disk, and using similar
> configuration as for booting
> Windows XP. Something along the lines:
I installed solaris boot loader on it own pratition (
hd1,0)and got the same result. The only thing I have
not tried is booting CentOs from Solaris boot loader (
reverse)
> title Solaris 10
> rootnoverify (hd1,0)
> chainloader +1
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Thanks Aleksandar
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