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On the issue of Compaq diagnostic partitions: they don't eat much, let them be. On a lot of Compaq systems the junk in the diagnostic partition is the only interface to the BIOS. How do I know? I've been there. Last year Microwarehouse was blowing out Compaq Profession Workstation 5000 systems for $899. These are PPro systems with a second CPU socket and Symbios/NCR 53c875 UltraWide SCSI on the motherboard. We bought 2! I originally thought that the junk at the beginning of the disk was trash and blew it away during the Red Hat installation. Then I bought some memory and went hunting for the BIOS - OOOPS! Fortunately the Compaq OEM kit has an option to put the system back the way they shipped it. I then re-did the installation, leaving the Compaq partition alone. At the end of the installation I configured Lilo to treat that partition as an Other partition bootable as "compaq". Everything from there out was fine. If I needed to get to the diagnostics, I just told Lilo to boot Compaq and away we went. In reality it was just a 35MB DOS partition with a custom Win3.1 application. Hope this helps, ccb --- Charles C. Bennett, Jr. Workgroup Technology Corp. Principal Software Engineer, 91 Hartwell Ave. Distributed Object Computing Lexington, MA 02421 "Talking about music is like tap dancing about architecture" - Laurie Anderson - Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
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