On Tue, Oct 15, 2013 at 9:12 AM, Steve Clark <sclark at netwolves.com> wrote: > Hi, > > My concern is that the installer will see the F14 / and /boot partitions > on the first > The installer shouldn't mess with them. Unless you choose a guided disk layout that removes existing partitions or formats existing file systems ... you should be fine. But you'll want to choose the option for manual partitioning. > drive and try to install there as opposed to the newly created / and /boot > partitions > on the second drive. > Just unhook the second drive. It's a simple, [hopefully] quick way of avoiding a catastrophe and you don't have to back up the partitions or MBR on that disk. Make sure your volume group names are unique [if using LVM] or that you use labels or UUIDs. When you hook that primary drive back up, the drive naming will change for the secondary drive. > > > > On 10/15/2013 09:03 AM, Marios Zindilis wrote: > > CentOS 6.4 and Fedora 14 are both using GRUB Legacy, so it should be OK > to > > install CentOS along with F14. The installer should detect both operating > > systems and add entries in GRUB menu for them. > > > > If the disk with Fedora is removed during the installation of CentOS, the > > system won't dual-boot... at least not without some GRUB tweaking. > > > > > -- ---~~.~~--- Mike // SilverTip257 //