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| Hi all, hope someone can help. I'm having a problem with my desktop machine (dual Windows/Linux, both installed on a single Maxtor 200GB disk): when I turn it on, it never boots and it goes into the CMOS Setup Utility instead. I still see the disk so I wonder if the disk is broken or there is some other problem. This is what I see within the CMOS Setup Utiliy: Channel 0 Master [None] Channel 0 Slave [Benq DVD] Channel 1 Master [None] Channel 1 Slave [None] Channel 2 Master [Maxtor 6V200E0] Channel 3 Master [None] Channel 4 Master [None] Channel 5 Master [None] The IDE Channel 2 Master is as follows: Extended IDE Drive [Auto] Capacity 203 Gb Cylinder 65535 Head 16 PreComp 0 Landing Zone 65534 Sector 255 Thanks a lot. |
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| On Mon, 03 Sep 2007 16:09:13 +0000, eric wrote: > Hi all, hope someone can help. > I'm having a problem with my desktop machine (dual Windows/Linux, both > installed on a single Maxtor 200GB disk): when I turn it on, it never > boots and it goes into the CMOS Setup Utility instead. I still see the > disk so I wonder if the disk is broken or there is some other problem. > > This is what I see within the CMOS Setup Utiliy: > > Channel 0 Master [None] > Channel 0 Slave [Benq DVD] > Channel 1 Master [None] > Channel 1 Slave [None] > Channel 2 Master [Maxtor 6V200E0] > Channel 3 Master [None] > Channel 4 Master [None] > Channel 5 Master [None] > > The IDE Channel 2 Master is as follows: > > Extended IDE Drive [Auto] > Capacity 203 Gb > Cylinder 65535 > Head 16 > PreComp 0 > Landing Zone 65534 > Sector 255 > > Thanks a lot. A question. Is your hard drive plugged into the IDE0 port? It should be, since it's your Master system drive. Windows "likes" being on IDE0 Master. Linux doesn't care. You might have a "blown" IDE0 controller chip, too. I had this happen on a system, which caused it to refuse to boot. I just sat there. Check all your connections to the motherboard and to your drives. Make sure nothing is loose or broken. Clean contacts. Check that your CMOS battery is good. When it dies, sometimes this causes booting problems. I'm assuming that this just started. What were you doing before the last shutdown when everything was working? Boot your system using a Linux Live CD to check that there is nothing wrong with your hardware. See if it recognizes and configures everything. Run fsck on your Linux partition(s). Any errors? If not, check if you can mount your hard drive, DVD, etc. Check that your MBR (Master Boot Record) is not damaged. I'm assuming that when you installed Linux, you wrote GRUB or LILO, to the MBR overwriting Windows' MBR. Boot with your Windows CD in Repair Mode, and see what happens. As a last resort you can write the Windows' MBR back to the hard drive (overwriting the Linux one) using the command 'fixmbr'. However, you won't be able to boot Linux anymore. Switch where your drives are connected. See if that does anything. Stef |
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| On Sep 4, 12:16 am, Stefan Patric <toot...@yahoo.com> wrote: > On Mon, 03 Sep 2007 16:09:13 +0000, eric wrote: > > Hi all, hope someone can help. > > I'm having a problem with my desktop machine (dual Windows/Linux, both > > installed on a single Maxtor 200GB disk): when I turn it on, it never > > boots and it goes into the CMOS Setup Utility instead. I still see the > > disk so I wonder if the disk is broken or there is some other problem. > > > This is what I see within the CMOS Setup Utiliy: > > > Channel 0 Master [None] > > Channel 0 Slave [Benq DVD] > > Channel 1 Master [None] > > Channel 1 Slave [None] > > Channel 2 Master [Maxtor 6V200E0] > > Channel 3 Master [None] > > Channel 4 Master [None] > > Channel 5 Master [None] > > > The IDE Channel 2 Master is as follows: > > > Extended IDE Drive [Auto] > > Capacity 203 Gb > > Cylinder 65535 > > Head 16 > > PreComp 0 > > Landing Zone 65534 > > Sector 255 > > > Thanks a lot. > > A question. Is your hard drive plugged into the IDE0 port? It should > be, since it's your Master system drive. Windows "likes" being on IDE0 > Master. Linux doesn't care. You might have a "blown" IDE0 controller > chip, too. I had this happen on a system, which caused it to refuse to > boot. I just sat there. > > Check all your connections to the motherboard and to your drives. Make > sure nothing is loose or broken. Clean contacts. > > Check that your CMOS battery is good. When it dies, sometimes this > causes booting problems. > > I'm assuming that this just started. What were you doing before the last > shutdown when everything was working? > > Boot your system using a Linux Live CD to check that there is nothing > wrong with your hardware. See if it recognizes and configures > everything. Run fsck on your Linux partition(s). Any errors? If not, > check if you can mount your hard drive, DVD, etc. Check that your MBR > (Master Boot Record) is not damaged. I'm assuming that when you > installed Linux, you wrote GRUB or LILO, to the MBR overwriting Windows' > MBR. > > Boot with your Windows CD in Repair Mode, and see what happens. As a > last resort you can write the Windows' MBR back to the hard drive > (overwriting the Linux one) using the command 'fixmbr'. However, you > won't be able to boot Linux anymore. > > Switch where your drives are connected. See if that does anything. > > Stef Thank you very much for your detailed answer. I switched keyboard and the problem has disappeared, so I assume it was a keyboard problem (though I can't quite pinpoint it). Still, I'm not 100% convinced. To answer your questions, my hard disk is plugged in IDE 2, and everything was working just fine before my last shutdown. |
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| On Tue, 04 Sep 2007 17:13:16 +0000, eric wrote: > On Sep 4, 12:16 am, Stefan Patric <toot...@yahoo.com> wrote: >> On Mon, 03 Sep 2007 16:09:13 +0000, eric wrote: >> > Hi all, hope someone can help. >> > I'm having a problem with my desktop machine (dual Windows/Linux, >> > both installed on a single Maxtor 200GB disk): when I turn it on, it >> > >> [snip] >> >> A question. Is your hard drive plugged into the IDE0 port? It should >> be, since it's your Master system drive. Windows "likes" being on IDE0 >> [snip] > > Thank you very much for your detailed answer. I switched keyboard and > the problem has disappeared, so I assume it was a keyboard problem > (though I can't quite pinpoint it). Still, I'm not 100% convinced. To > answer your questions, my hard disk is plugged in IDE 2, and everything > was working just fine before my last shutdown. Well, I've never had a bad keyboard, but since everything is working with the new one, I wouldn't concern myself too much. If you want to confirm it's really the keyboard, swap it on someone else's working system and see what happens. Things do break. One session everything is fine, but on the next boot.... Nothing. Have had it happen several times. Ultimately, the problems were traced to blown chips on the motherboard, bad power supply voltage output, intermittently going bad CPU, overheating CPU, etc. Why did you use IDE2 instead of IDE0 for your hard drive? Your only one, right? Just curious. A few years ago, if you had done that, your system wouldn't have booted. Then, you were required to have the boot drive on IDE0. Stef |
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