| [ windows ] in KIDS 글 쓴 이(By): kiky ( 박 용 섭) 날 짜 (Date): 1999년 8월 24일 화요일 오후 12시 13분 14초 제 목(Title): Re: 하드디스크 업그레이드 .. 제가 묻고 대답하게 되었는데 ... 찾아보니 다음과 같은 기사가 넷에 떠 있군요 .. From the March 1997 Issue of PC World Answer Line Edited by Scott Spanbauer Replace Your C: Drive in Win 95 1. Turn off your computer and install the new EIDE hard disk as the second (slave) drive, following the drive manufacturer's instructions. 2. Close up the PC and turn it on. Following the manufacturer's instructions, enter the new drive's settings in your system's BIOS setup program. If your BIOS has already recognized and configured the drive, set the type to Auto, and write down the current drive's settings. 3. Enter fdisk at the DOS prompt, and partition all or part of the new drive as a primary partition (extended partitions aren't bootable). 4. Reboot and enter format d: /s at the DOS prompt; d is the letter of the new hard disk. 5. Select Start*Settings*Control Panel, and double-click Add/Remove Programs. Click the Startup Disk tab in the resulting dialog box, click Create Disk, and follow the instructions. 6. Close all running applications, then choose Start*Run. In the Open field, enter xcopy c:\*.* /e /h /k /r /c d: and click OK. 7. Shut down Win 95, turn off your PC, and rejump the drives following the manufacturer's instructions for exchanging the IDE drives' master and slave roles. Turn on the PC, edit the CMOS drive tables to reflect the change, then continue booting with your start-up disk. 8. Using fdisk, make partition one of disk one the active partition, then exit fdisk and reboot. Win 95 should boot from the new hard disk. 부가적으로 다음과같은 팁도 추가 되어 있었습니다. Besides adding the /r parameter that lets xcopy overwrite read-only files, I've added /c, which lets the program continue copying if it encounters an error when it gets to Windows 95's swap file. Since the swap file is re-created each time you start Windows 95, you shouldn't have any problem. However, if your swap file is located on a drive that no longer exists, or if it has a different drive letter after you switch the drives, Windows may gripe. For best results, move it back to drive C: before you start the transfer process: Choose Start*Settings*Control Panel. In the Control Panel, double-click the System icon, click the Performance tab and the Virtual Memory button, select Let me specify my own virtual memory settings, then pick C:\ from the Hard disk list and click OK*Yes*OK. If you're uncomfortable using fdisk, format, and xcopy commands, or if you need to upgrade the hard disks of multiple Windows 95 machines, you may want to give Binary Research's Ghost Professional 1.5.1 utility a try. Ghost does much of the dirty work for you. But you'll still have to physically install the drive (steps 1 and 2 in "Replace Your C: Drive in Win 95"), use Ghost to replicate the contents of the master drives, then switch the drives' master and slave roles (steps 7 and 8). You can run Ghost within Windows 95 from the command prompt, or from an MS-DOS boot floppy disk. Ghost even handles Windows NT NTFS partitions, OS/2 boot manager partitions, and OS/2 extended attributes; it should support FAT32 by the time you read this. It also lets you copy drive contents over networks and parallel cable connections. Download a 30-day trial version from Binary Research's Web site. 그럼 .. ------------- 박 용 섭 (Yongsup Park) | +82-42-868-5397(O), 5032(F) Surface Analysis Group, KRISS | park@kriss.re.kr P.O. Box 102, Yusong | http://www.surface.kriss.re.kr/~park/ Taejon, 305-600, KOREA | Amateur Radio: DS3GLW |