Sorry if this is a bit off-topic but I have a few questions about installing Solaris 11.1 and using BIBM:
1) Does anyone know if the Solarus 11.1 x86 install overwrites the MBR ?
2) Does anyone know if Solaris 11.1 will still boot if it overwrites the MBR and I have BIBM restore itself from CD to the MBR ?
I know there is a FAQ about Solaris and BootIt but that is for a much earlier version of Solaris and am wondering if it is still true for Solaris 11.1. I asked about Solaris on the Oracle forums but never got a reply.
Installing Solaris 11.1
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
Why not set up a virtual machine and do an install and see what
options you get during the install? VirtualBox is free and from Oracle
too.
--
Cheers
DrT
______________________________
We may not be able to prevent the stormy times in
our lives; but we can always choose whether or not
to dance in the puddles (Jewish proverb).
options you get during the install? VirtualBox is free and from Oracle
too.
--
Cheers
DrT
______________________________
We may not be able to prevent the stormy times in
our lives; but we can always choose whether or not
to dance in the puddles (Jewish proverb).
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
DrTeeth wrote:
> Why not set up a virtual machine and do an install and see what
> options you get during the install? VirtualBox is free and from Oracle
> too.
I can run the install and no doubt recover from it if it overwrites the MBR by just booting from my BIBM CD and reactivating BIBM. I was merely interested if anyone knows if Solaris would boot afterward from the partition I install it in. I admit I have never used a virtual machine product under Windows and Linux and am therefore pretty distrusful of their capabilities.
> Why not set up a virtual machine and do an install and see what
> options you get during the install? VirtualBox is free and from Oracle
> too.
I can run the install and no doubt recover from it if it overwrites the MBR by just booting from my BIBM CD and reactivating BIBM. I was merely interested if anyone knows if Solaris would boot afterward from the partition I install it in. I admit I have never used a virtual machine product under Windows and Linux and am therefore pretty distrusful of their capabilities.
-
- Posts: 3636
- Joined: Thu May 05, 2011 10:37 pm
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
"copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from LBA
0.
"eldiener" wrote in message news:5060@public.bootitbm...
Sorry if this is a bit off-topic but I have a few questions about installing
Solaris 11.1 and using BIBM:
1) Does anyone know if the Solarus 11.1 x86 install overwrites the MBR ?
2) Does anyone know if Solaris 11.1 will still boot if it overwrites the MBR
and I have BIBM restore itself from CD to the MBR ?
I know there is a FAQ about Solaris and BootIt but that is for a much
earlier version of Solaris and am wondering if it is still true for Solaris
11.1. I asked about Solaris on the Oracle forums but never got a reply.
"copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from LBA
0.
"eldiener" wrote in message news:5060@public.bootitbm...
Sorry if this is a bit off-topic but I have a few questions about installing
Solaris 11.1 and using BIBM:
1) Does anyone know if the Solarus 11.1 x86 install overwrites the MBR ?
2) Does anyone know if Solaris 11.1 will still boot if it overwrites the MBR
and I have BIBM restore itself from CD to the MBR ?
I know there is a FAQ about Solaris and BootIt but that is for a much
earlier version of Solaris and am wondering if it is still true for Solaris
11.1. I asked about Solaris on the Oracle forums but never got a reply.
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
eldiener wrote:
>I admit I
> have never used a virtual machine product under Windows and Linux and am therefore
> pretty distrusful of their capabilities.
???????
If you have never used Solaris before, are you 'distrustful of it' ? Do you apply 'never used it so don't trust it' to everything in your life ?
Take a chance or two.
>I admit I
> have never used a virtual machine product under Windows and Linux and am therefore
> pretty distrusful of their capabilities.
???????
If you have never used Solaris before, are you 'distrustful of it' ? Do you apply 'never used it so don't trust it' to everything in your life ?
Take a chance or two.
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
TeraByte Support wrote:
> I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
> "copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from LBA
>
> 0.
Does not the Reactivate BIBM restore the MBR if Solaris overwrites it so that BIBM is once again my boot manager ?
>
> "eldiener" wrote in message news:5060@public.bootitbm...
>
> Sorry if this is a bit off-topic but I have a few questions about
> installing
> Solaris 11.1 and using BIBM:
>
> 1) Does anyone know if the Solarus 11.1 x86 install overwrites the MBR ?
> 2) Does anyone know if Solaris 11.1 will still boot if it overwrites the
> MBR
> and I have BIBM restore itself from CD to the MBR ?
>
> I know there is a FAQ about Solaris and BootIt but that is for a much
> earlier version of Solaris and am wondering if it is still true for Solaris
>
> 11.1. I asked about Solaris on the Oracle forums but never got a reply.
> I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
> "copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from LBA
>
> 0.
Does not the Reactivate BIBM restore the MBR if Solaris overwrites it so that BIBM is once again my boot manager ?
>
> "eldiener" wrote in message news:5060@public.bootitbm...
>
> Sorry if this is a bit off-topic but I have a few questions about
> installing
> Solaris 11.1 and using BIBM:
>
> 1) Does anyone know if the Solarus 11.1 x86 install overwrites the MBR ?
> 2) Does anyone know if Solaris 11.1 will still boot if it overwrites the
> MBR
> and I have BIBM restore itself from CD to the MBR ?
>
> I know there is a FAQ about Solaris and BootIt but that is for a much
> earlier version of Solaris and am wondering if it is still true for Solaris
>
> 11.1. I asked about Solaris on the Oracle forums but never got a reply.
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
DrTeeth wrote:
> eldiener wrote:
> >I admit I
> > have never used a virtual machine product under Windows and Linux and am
> therefore
> > pretty distrusful of their capabilities.
>
> ???????
> If you have never used Solaris before, are you 'distrustful of it' ? Do you apply
> 'never used it so don't trust it' to everything in your life ?
Running a virtual machine under Windows installs it in the Windows partition ( I assume ). Installing Solaris installs it in its own partition I assume. Therefore I am more distrustful of the software messing up in the former case than in the latter case. Yes, I have all my partitions backed up to external hard drives but still I dislike messing myself up with software for which ordinarily I have little use. Running a virtual machine on my computer, even if it works adequately, seems hard enough given the fact that OSs themselves have enough problems with hardware. In the present case I just wanted to check if anyone else using BIBM has installed Solaris 11.1 and knows if it works well with BIBM or presents any problems as part of its installation.
>
> Take a chance or two.
Scary <g>.
> eldiener wrote:
> >I admit I
> > have never used a virtual machine product under Windows and Linux and am
> therefore
> > pretty distrusful of their capabilities.
>
> ???????
> If you have never used Solaris before, are you 'distrustful of it' ? Do you apply
> 'never used it so don't trust it' to everything in your life ?
Running a virtual machine under Windows installs it in the Windows partition ( I assume ). Installing Solaris installs it in its own partition I assume. Therefore I am more distrustful of the software messing up in the former case than in the latter case. Yes, I have all my partitions backed up to external hard drives but still I dislike messing myself up with software for which ordinarily I have little use. Running a virtual machine on my computer, even if it works adequately, seems hard enough given the fact that OSs themselves have enough problems with hardware. In the present case I just wanted to check if anyone else using BIBM has installed Solaris 11.1 and knows if it works well with BIBM or presents any problems as part of its installation.
>
> Take a chance or two.
Scary <g>.
-
- Posts: 3636
- Joined: Thu May 05, 2011 10:37 pm
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
Sure, if that's all it did. However If it altered other things in the first
track then it probably be nice to have a backup somewhere just in case.
(always make sure you have control over where the OS will be installed so it
doesn't just overwrite everything).
"eldiener" wrote in message news:5074@public.bootitbm...
TeraByte Support wrote:
> I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
> "copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from
> LBA
>
> 0.
Does not the Reactivate BIBM restore the MBR if Solaris overwrites it so
that BIBM is once again my boot manager ?
track then it probably be nice to have a backup somewhere just in case.
(always make sure you have control over where the OS will be installed so it
doesn't just overwrite everything).
"eldiener" wrote in message news:5074@public.bootitbm...
TeraByte Support wrote:
> I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
> "copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from
> LBA
>
> 0.
Does not the Reactivate BIBM restore the MBR if Solaris overwrites it so
that BIBM is once again my boot manager ?
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
eldiener wrote:
> Running a virtual machine under Windows installs it in the Windows partition ( I
> assume ). Installing Solaris installs it in its own partition I assume. Therefore I
> am more distrustful of the software messing up in the former case than in the latter
> case.
You are so wrong in your assumptions. Nothing messes up anything except operator error (been there loads of times myself). Do yourself a favour and read the Virtualbox manual and see what you are missing - SAFE experimenting on a massive scale .
DrT
> Running a virtual machine under Windows installs it in the Windows partition ( I
> assume ). Installing Solaris installs it in its own partition I assume. Therefore I
> am more distrustful of the software messing up in the former case than in the latter
> case.
You are so wrong in your assumptions. Nothing messes up anything except operator error (been there loads of times myself). Do yourself a favour and read the Virtualbox manual and see what you are missing - SAFE experimenting on a massive scale .
DrT
Re: Installing Solaris 11.1
TeraByte Support wrote:
> Sure, if that's all it did. However If it altered other things in the
> first
> track then it probably be nice to have a backup somewhere just in case.
> (always make sure you have control over where the OS will be installed so
> it
> doesn't just overwrite everything).
Is there a FAQ on how to copy and restore sectors with BIBM ? I did not see anything in the documentation on how to do this. I agree that I do want a backup of the mbr and embr so that I can restore them if necessary.
>
> "eldiener" wrote in message news:5074@public.bootitbm...
>
> TeraByte Support wrote:
> > I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
> > "copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from
> > LBA
> >
> > 0.
>
> Does not the Reactivate BIBM restore the MBR if Solaris overwrites it so
> that BIBM is once again my boot manager ?
> Sure, if that's all it did. However If it altered other things in the
> first
> track then it probably be nice to have a backup somewhere just in case.
> (always make sure you have control over where the OS will be installed so
> it
> doesn't just overwrite everything).
Is there a FAQ on how to copy and restore sectors with BIBM ? I did not see anything in the documentation on how to do this. I agree that I do want a backup of the mbr and embr so that I can restore them if necessary.
>
> "eldiener" wrote in message news:5074@public.bootitbm...
>
> TeraByte Support wrote:
> > I haven't used that version - you can save the mbr (and embr) using the
> > "copy sectors" feature of "scripting" in BIBM. Copy 63 sectors from
> > LBA
> >
> > 0.
>
> Does not the Reactivate BIBM restore the MBR if Solaris overwrites it so
> that BIBM is once again my boot manager ?