El Blog de Seguridad
A place to keep a record of my journey through IT security
  • Home
  • About Me
  • Security Tools

Posts Tagged ‘partition’

Setting up Netbook to Dual Boot to Backtrack 4

Tutorial 1 Comment »

back|track 4 logoI have an Eee PC 1000HA and have been wanting to get more familiar with Backtrack.  I was tempted to just wipe out the drive completely and run pure BackTrack, but that would probably be less effective for my wife who shares the laptop with me.

The box touts 160GB total, but that’s inflated by 20Gb (not to mention the wrong calculation of GB – 160,000,000,000 Bytes (what retailers say is 160 GB) is really only 149 GigaBytes).  The break down of partitions ends up being

  1. 80 GB for the main partition, with XP installed on it
  2. 60 GB as an empty partition
  3. 9 GB as the emergency recovery drive
  4. 41 MB as something unidentifiable – I’m assuming this is just leftovers that didn’t fit somewhere

The tutorial on offensive-security.com showed the capability of choosing a guided-partition resize option, that let you drag a little bar to tell it how much space you wanted allocated for the install.  Well, all i got was either an option to format the whole hard drive or manually edit the partition tables.  I ended up taking the crash course in hard drive partitioning.

I figured I’d install Backtrack on part of the 60GB and freaked out when I sized it to 40GB, that the other 20GB became unusable.  After doing some research I found that I could easily extend the 40GB partition to fill up the 20GB, but with there being already 4 primary partitions, I couldn’t split it up, at least with the GUI provided.  So I went with a 60GB BackTrack partition with 1GB of swap memory.

So the final distribution ends up being 80GB for windows, 10GB for the emergency recovery, 59GB, about 1GB for swap.  I created a logical partition for the swap since it didn’t matter.

On the last stage of the installation, under the Advanced menu I left the boot loader device selection at default (hd0).

In theory, this should work.  But it didn’t for me (I got a little excited and posted this before I actually rebooted my computer).  The Grub boot loader never displayed on start-up.

What did end up working was to copy the /boot and /casper directories to my main hard drive and install Grub for windows (with some changes to the boot.ini and BackTrack menu.lst file).  Check out John’s very clear description here (written for BackTrack 4 Pre-Final, but it worked for me with the final release of 4).


January 15th, 2010 |

Tags: backtrack, linux distro, partition, security




  • Recent Posts

    • Opening Ports in Windows 7 Firewall
    • Setting up Netbook to Dual Boot to Backtrack 4
    • XSS: Cross Site Scripting
    • nessusrc
    • Installing Nessus 2.2.11
  • Security Blogs

    • Craig Security
    • DarkNet.org
    • DarkReading.com
    • GNU Citizen
    • Iron Geek
    • Matasano
    • RootSecure.net
  • RSS Security Articles

    • Decrypting Symantec BackupExec passwords March 10, 2010 extern blog SensePost;
    • Microsoft Warns of Internet Explorer 0day March 10, 2010 BrianKrebs
    • Importance of end-to-end encryption in the retail space March 9, 2010 View From The Bunker
    • APT: Should your panties be in a bunch, and how do you un-bunch them? March 9, 2010 Matt Olney
    • Monoprice.com Shuttered After Fraud Complaints March 9, 2010 BrianKrebs
    • Cloud-based (FILE) Integrity Monitoring March 9, 2010 http://sucuri.net
    • LifeLock will pay $12 million for false claims March 9, 2010 Tom Kelchner
    • Microsoft IE 6 & 7 Zero-day (Aside) March 9, 2010 Simon Price
    • Is it Wireless Security or Secure Wireless? March 9, 2010 mrothman@securosis.com
    • March Patch Tuesday Overshadowed by New IE Zero-Day Vulnerability March 9, 2010 Paul Henry
  • Categories

    • linux
    • Nessus
    • network
    • OWASP Top 10
    • Security Tools
    • Tutorial
    • Uncategorized
    • Windows Command Line
  • Archives

    • March 2010
    • January 2010
    • November 2009
    • January 2009
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
Copyright © 2010 El Blog de Seguridad All Rights Reserved
RSS XHTML CSS Log in
Wp Theme by n Graphic Design
Powered by Wordpress