All I did was try to install Debian 7 and the RAID5 was just some option that came up during partitioning. I read about it and understood it was supposed to keep whole old stuff sale. That was my understanding and I'm left with no OS neither Debian nor win7
________________________________ From: Gary Dale <garyd...@rogers.com> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org Sent: Saturday, 22 June 2013, 21:47 Subject: Re: Unidentified subject! On 22/06/13 04:38 PM, Lagun Adeshina wrote: > Hi Guys, > I need your help. > > 1. I set out to install Debian from Windows 7 > > 2. I downloaded the win 32 Debian Installer and went through the procedures > > 3. On reaching the partitioning option I got a little confused I had > used the RAID5 Partition then > > 4. I went on to stop the installing > > 5. I could not restart either my window 7 nor continue the installing > > 6. My computer is a emachine 732 running initially on windows 7 > > 7. Help me please This could be that the Windows 7 partition was corrupted. I always advise people to do the partitioning outside of the installation when doing a dual-boot. The reason is that Windows file systems are touchy and probably need to be checked after being resized. The fact that you seem to have a RAID 5 array, which I'm guessing is using the SATA RAID drivers for Windows, makes things more complicated. However, we need more information on what exactly your setup is, where the RAID 5 comes in, and what happens when you try to boot. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/51c60d50.5030...@rogers.com