At 11:34 AM 10/1/02 -0700, you wrote: >Something else occurred to me. If you're getting a file not found error from >Windows, then your boot loader might not be the problem. Does it say which >file is missing? Is linux and Windows on the same drive? If they are did you >defrag the Windows partition before you made the linux partition? > >Bart History: - computer arrives with Win2k installed on NTFS - Shrink original partition and create 2 additional partitions using Partition Magic - Install Win98 on FAT32 on one of the partitions so that Win2k provides choice between them - Install RH 7.3 on the third partition, choosing to put GRUB in the MBR - Now have computer that provides "Red Hat" and "DOS" choices in GRUB - Choosing Red Hat boots Linux. Cool. - Choosing DOS brings up the Win2k boot menu, providing Win2k and Win98 choices. - Choosing Win98 there boots Win98. Fine. - Choosing Win2k there produces: "Windows 2000 could not start because the following file is missing or corrupt: /system32/ntoskrnl.exe. Please re-install a copy of the above file." I know I need to do "fdisk /mbr" from a Windows boot disk to get Win2k back alive (at least I am pretty sure that's what must be done). But, what do I do after that to make the Linux partition selectable and bootable since that operation will wipe out GRUB? At this point, it may be just as easy to re-install the Linux after fixing the Win2k boot problem. I just wanted to learn how to do it without re-installing. Alan