flat assembler
Message board for the users of flat assembler.
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Madis731 15 Feb 2005, 19:25
![]() now I know its the other way round ![]() I would really like to have this kind of ... tool? MenuetOS universal Boot-Loader MeOSBL! |
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Dex4u 15 Feb 2005, 20:42
I have you try this http://www2.arnes.si/~fkomar/xosl.org
Note: I do not now if it will suite your task, So you will after read about it your self. |
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ShortCoder 17 Feb 2005, 03:42
Well, I think most are technically independent of the OS functions, but requiring even a single dependent file (perhaps a configuration file) to reside on the same partition as a specific OS severely compromises the bootloader should something go wrong with that OS which corrupts the filesystem. Now you couldn't boot anything in that case (without a backup)
Now that I've thought about this longer, I do believe you can have a sole partition only for /boot under Linux (and maybe UNIXes), where LILO or Grub can reside, separate from where the Linux OS is installed. Correct me if I'm wrong. Thank you for the XOSL bootloader:) Unfortunately, if you go to the xosl sourceforge page, they have none of that there (that I can find), and external links in some of the documentation don't work. Also, xosl.org is dead. Fortunately, you found a place hosting that bootloader, and I thank you for this. ![]() It seems promising, although it doesn't appear to allow booting OSes from ext2 or ext3 partitions, but I could be doing something wrong. It should be noted that I did NOT install any OSes into the ext2 and ext3 partitions I made, and perhaps if I had, they would be choosable for booting. It should also be noted, however, that ALL of the FAT partitions and NTFS partition were choices, even the ones with nothing on them other than a fresh format. I will update this thread at such time as I have further tested this (with installing other OSes and trying to use this). The really bad thing is, it seems, that computers with preinstalled WindowsXP with only recovery CDs force upon the user the full size of an entire hard disk to an NTFS volume, with no way to change this without buying expensive third-party software because Microsoft seemed to think it was a nice thing not to provide any sort of WindowsXP tool to do this. I seem to remember using fdisk and format in Windows98 to do similar, with NO problems. *sigh* Why didn't Microsoft simply port fdisk to WindowsXP, and add NTFS support? It also wouldn't be so bad as is, were it not for the fact that NTFS is proprietary with no published standards (that I know of). I guess I just wanted an OS bootloader with minimal overhead. Again, xosl looks promising, so I will have to try it again later, but if it happens that it won't let me boot off the ext3 partitions once I install OSes on them, I'm going to have to ditch it. Hopefully it will work. ![]() _________________ Boycott Symantec/Norton/PowerQuest whenever possible |
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f0dder 17 Feb 2005, 04:05
Quote:
Most people generally don't need this. And if Microsoft produced a tool to do it, they would have a lawsuit for bundling software with their OS. Fdisk wouldn't be enough, you need something like partitionmagic to do non-destructive partition resize. An OS bootloader could use "the first track" of the harddrive, since it's reserved - problem is that some copy protection systems also use this space, and that sucks. |
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ShortCoder 17 Feb 2005, 04:26
f0dder wrote:
True. Doesn't Microsoft already bundle an awfully large amount of software with their OS? Isn't it equally anti-competitive not to publicly release the NTFS specification, thereby not allowing competing products to make compatible software with it? It's been a while since I used fdisk, so perhaps I was mistaken, though I thought I remembered resizing partitions with it in the past. Maybe not. I'll go a step farther and say that any copy-protections suck. They hinder only the legitimate users of products and do nothing to deter piracy. Cracks are soon made. Legitimate users suffer. True that most people don't need this but most people don't need lots of the bundled stuff Windows tends to come with, things much more useless to the average user than this. Most people are content with the defaults and using exclusively Internet Explorer to browse, but it doesn't mean we should not be given options included with the OS to change these defaults now does it? I hate bad settings being forced on me. I think you do too. With no builtin resizing method (and with only restore CDs), this is essentially a permanently bad setting. _________________ Boycott Symantec/Norton/PowerQuest whenever possible |
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Dex4u 17 Feb 2005, 17:27
I agree with ShortCoder, on this one, M$ should ether provide away to set the hdd back to what it was before making it NTFS, or make the the spec available for other to do so.
I think as hardware gets cheaper, this sort of thing will backfire on them. |
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Madis731 18 Feb 2005, 14:13
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