Difference between revisions of "Recovering from Recovery CDs"
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− | + | Information about the recovery process using IBM provided recovery CDs. | |
+ | |||
+ | ==Coverage of this approach== | ||
+ | If you install from a Recovery CD, you should get all your drivers and | ||
+ | pre-installed software back. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Things to be aware of== | ||
+ | ===How does the recovery process deal with existing partition layouts?=== | ||
+ | Recovery deletes the first partition and then installs to the first | ||
+ | block of contiguous free space (which could be bigger than the original | ||
+ | first partition if there was free space after it). Later partitions | ||
+ | are safe. The partition must be at least 8GB or so or else the | ||
+ | recovery will either fail or produce a corrupt Windows installation. | ||
+ | You can save a little space if you intervene during some of the IBM | ||
+ | software installs, reduce the swap size and disable hibernation, but | ||
+ | you have to time this carefully. |
Revision as of 02:01, 28 September 2004
Information about the recovery process using IBM provided recovery CDs.
Coverage of this approach
If you install from a Recovery CD, you should get all your drivers and pre-installed software back.
Things to be aware of
How does the recovery process deal with existing partition layouts?
Recovery deletes the first partition and then installs to the first block of contiguous free space (which could be bigger than the original first partition if there was free space after it). Later partitions are safe. The partition must be at least 8GB or so or else the recovery will either fail or produce a corrupt Windows installation. You can save a little space if you intervene during some of the IBM software installs, reduce the swap size and disable hibernation, but you have to time this carefully.