Forum: EasyBoot Topic: ISO start from a other partition? started by: Germanboy4u Posted by Germanboy4u on Nov. 20 2011,04:06
Hi,I'm new in EasyBoot and have one question. Is it possible to start ISOs from an other partition? I have a external HDD with 2 Partions. 1. partion is with FAT32 (where the boot system is) 2. partion is with NTFS for data and big ISO (bigger than 4 gb) Can somebody help me? Thanks Germanboy4u Posted by balder on Nov. 20 2011,05:14
@Germanboy4uAs a new member I say welcome @Germanboy4u ![]() Quote: "Is it possible to start ISOs from an other partition?" Yes it is - but unfortunately not having FAT32 as 'boot-partition' ![]() You must reverse and use NTFS as 'boot'partition' and launch 'oversized' ISO-files from this NTFS-partition Unfortunately EasyBoot cannot run on NTFS-partition - must be FAT32-partition However there is solution to this problem - read post nr;2 < HERE > On the other hand, it is most likely possible to launch ISO placed on FAT32-partition if this partition is the second (first partition=boot must be NTFS) We can launch ISO that are put to an FAT32 if 'boot-partition' is NTFS. But not from FAT32 to NTFS This is done using grub (floppy images with grldr-boot record) balder Posted by Germanboy4u on Nov. 20 2011,05:17
Thank you Balder.I will try it the next days. I need fat32 for some linux distris. These ISO runs only on FAT32 Posted by balder on Nov. 20 2011,06:31
@Germanboy4uQuote: "I need fat32 for some linux distris. These ISO runs only on FAT32" I recognize this problem - its common ![]() I launch different linux distro's (ISO-files) from my second USB hard-disk partition which is FAT32 Partition 1 (the 'boot-partition') is NTFS but as you correctly points out - linux needs FAT32. As told, I use a 500GB USB hard-disk with two partitions. Partition-1 is NTFS and second partition is FAT32 I use my solution as described to launch EasyBoot menu. And from Easyboot menu I'm able to launch different "grub-kicker-images" which 'auto-search' and launch different linux-distros ![]() An typicall example is 'YLMF.ISO' that is placed in a folder 'ISO' on the second FAT32-partition. This works alright without hesitating ![]() regards balder |