From 70c1cc4a6ab8e8c06cfc7c6e5e43071485f03bda Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Barry Jackson Date: Thu, 10 May 2012 18:28:34 +0000 Subject: add eo and pt_br folders --- pt_br/setupBootloaderBeginner.html | 236 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 236 insertions(+) create mode 100644 pt_br/setupBootloaderBeginner.html (limited to 'pt_br/setupBootloaderBeginner.html') diff --git a/pt_br/setupBootloaderBeginner.html b/pt_br/setupBootloaderBeginner.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..00181c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/pt_br/setupBootloaderBeginner.html @@ -0,0 +1,236 @@ + + + + + Bootloader main options + + + + + + +
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Bootloader main + options +

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If you prefer + different bootloader settings to those chosen automatically by the + installer, you can change them here. +

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You may already have + another operating system on your machine, in which case you need to decide + whether to add Mageia to your existing bootloader, or allow Mageia to create + a new one. +

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[Tip]Tip
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The Mageia + graphical menu is nice :) +

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Using the Mageia + bootloader +

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By default Mageia + writes a new GRUB bootloader into the MBR (Master Boot Record) of your + first hard drive. If you already have other operating systems installed, + Mageia attempts to add them to your new Mageia boot menu. +

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This works + correctly in the majority of cases for Linux and + Windows® + systems. +

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[Warning]Warning
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Linux systems + which use the GRUB2 bootloader (e.g. more recent Debian/Ubuntu + derivatives) are not currently supported and will not be recognised. One + possible solution for this is to follow the steps explained here the section called “Adding a GRUB2 based system + manually” before installing Mageia next to such a + system, however there is no guarantee. +

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If you are + already installing Mageia without having taken those steps, (and do not + already know the GRUB2 version and/or it's root partition) then install + the Mageia bootloader in the root partition for now (see next section), + and inspect your GRUB2 based system after rebooting at the end of the + installation. Note that you will not yet be able to boot Mageia, however + you will be able to use the Mageia install DVD to perform a quick + "upgrade install" at a later date to correctly install the bootloader to + the MBR. +

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Using an + existing bootloader +

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If you decide to + use an existing bootloader then you will need to remember to STOP at the + summary page during the installation and click the Bootloader + Configure button, which will allow you to change + the bootloader install location. +

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Do not select a + device e.g."sda", or you will overwrite your existing MBR. You must select + the root partition that you chose during the partitioning phase earlier + e.g. sda7. +

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To be clear, sda + is a device, sda7 is a partition. +

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[Tip]Tip
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Go to tty2 + with Ctrl+Alt+F2 and type df to check where your + / (root) partition is. Ctrl+Alt+F7 takes you back to + the installer screen. +

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The exact + procedure for adding your Mageia system to an existing bootloader is + beyond the scope of this help, however in most cases it will involve + running the relevant bootloader installation program which should detect + and add it automatically. See the documentation for the operating system + in question. +

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Bootloader + advanced option +

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If you have very + limited disk space for the / partition that contains + /tmp, click on Advanced and + check the box for Clean /tmp at each boot. This helps + to maintain some free space. +

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+ + -- cgit v1.2.1