Hello all. Long time gentoo user here, trying out kubuntu.
Basically, I am trying it out to put on some of my friend's PCs, as they have been asking me about Linux and I want to put something they can easily use and administer on there. Gentoo rocks, but it is not meant for newbies ;-)
Basically, I figured I would install it on my main desktop and have the installed append my grub config file to include it as well.
Unfortunately, when I told it where /boot was (sda2) it decided to wipe the whole content, even when I specifically told the installer not to format the partition. It did warn me it would delete stuff, but this kind of blows.
Is there a reason why the installer will not play nice with other distributions and try to use the existing bootloader? Especially when it is grub, chosen specifically because of this?
Opensuse was nice enough to at least not wipe my kernel from the folder and ask if I wanted to use the existing grub.conf file. Everything else about it sucked, but that part was nice.
Basically, I am trying it out to put on some of my friend's PCs, as they have been asking me about Linux and I want to put something they can easily use and administer on there. Gentoo rocks, but it is not meant for newbies ;-)
Basically, I figured I would install it on my main desktop and have the installed append my grub config file to include it as well.
Unfortunately, when I told it where /boot was (sda2) it decided to wipe the whole content, even when I specifically told the installer not to format the partition. It did warn me it would delete stuff, but this kind of blows.
Is there a reason why the installer will not play nice with other distributions and try to use the existing bootloader? Especially when it is grub, chosen specifically because of this?
Opensuse was nice enough to at least not wipe my kernel from the folder and ask if I wanted to use the existing grub.conf file. Everything else about it sucked, but that part was nice.
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