First of all, ya gotta get OS/2's boot manager to be the booter. (Sounds simple,
but DOS kept trying to make itself the booter...) Second, ya gotta
_successfully_ compile the kernel. Third, ya gotta get shoelace or LILO. (I
didn't get LILO to work, and Linux wouldn't boot itself w/out shoelace. Maybe
my system's just weird.)
After you get everything installed and working, add the Linux root partition
to the OS/2 Boot Manager (using the OS/2 Fdisk) and you should be in
business. (It's been a few weeks since I did it last, so I can't give
specific details. And for those of you with OS/2 sitting up on the shelf
because it's such an HD hog, you don't need OS/2 to run the OS/2 Boot Manager.
At least _I_ don't. :-) (I have OS/2 (_*MUCH*_ better than Windows, IMHO) but
it was a choice between more Linux space and more DOS space for the OS/2 Dual
Boot, so I put IBM in its place, on my shelf :-).
Anyhow, I have the OS/2 Boot Manager set to boot either DOS or Linux, with
no problems.
IMHO, the only problem with the OS/2 Boot Manager sans OS/2 is that you have
to boot off the Install disk and wait for the Install program to load so you
can back out to an OS/2 prompt to get to its FDISK. But it's a small price
to pay until LILO works for me.
James
James P. Callison Microcomputer Coordinator OU Law Library
Callison@aardvark.ucs.uoknor.edu /\ Callison@uokmax.ecn.uoknor
constellation!biglaw!callison@mailhost.ecn.uoknor.edu
DISCLAIMER: I'm not an engineer, but I play one at work...
Here's to all the soldiers who have ever died in vain,
The insane locked up in themselves, the homeless down on Main
To those who stand on empty shores, and spit against the wind
And those who wait forever for ships that don't come in
--Joe Diffee, "Ships That Don't Come In"