Earlier today my Kubuntu froze, totally. The only way I could get out of it was to hard reboot, which I did. But when it came up, the default DE came up not *any* of my previous settings. Is it possible to recover my previously configured DE?
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
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- Seattle, WA, USA
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Originally posted by RLynwood View Postthe default DE came up not *any* of my previous settings
Originally posted by RLynwood View PostIs it possible to recover my previously configured DE?
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Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostThat would generally require the deletion of several files in ~/.kde and ~/.config.
Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostIf the configuration files that hold this information are truly gone, then recovery is unlikely. Google can help you find ways to "undelete" files on EXT4 file systems -- I'm assuming that's what you have, given it's the default. Such efforts are not always successful.
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... yes, and as we discussed, and I hope you agree , please consider doing ALL you partitioning ahead of time before installing Kubuntu; consider running GParted Live CD 64-bit (for UEFI etc.) to accomplish this work, setting up all your partitions: ("root") /, /home, swap, etc., as ext4, say. The Kubuntu installer will see your work and use your partitions. No need to let the installer re-format any of your partitions that you already formatted as ext4 using GParetd Live CD.An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
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Originally posted by Qqmike View Post... yes, and as we discussed, and I hope you agree , please consider doing ALL you partitioning ahead of time before installing Kubuntu;
Originally posted by Qqmike View Postconsider running GParted Live CD 64-bit (for UEFI etc.) to accomplish this work, setting up all your partitions: ("root") /, /home, swap, etc., as ext4, say. The Kubuntu installer will see your work and use your partitions. No need to let the installer re-format any of your partitions that you already formatted as ext4 using GParetd Live CD.
Now I have all my data in a separate partition that isn't Kub's home. I simply have Dolphin directed to that partition's Documents folder for routine file browsing/work (I also have that partition's other folders (Downloads, Pictures, Music, Videos, etc.) bookmarked so I can get to them easily. Since I'm still not 100% sure that I want to use Kubuntu, though I'm 99.999....% sure that I will (I really like almost everything about it), I want to keep my "data" (I call it information) in a separate, dedicated location.
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I think KDE Partition Editor is fine.
Yet, many of us consider GParted (Live CD/USB) to be a/the gold standard.
I didn't know that I could make different partitions for the different parts of the OS, that is, root and /home. (Of course I had a separate partition for swap.) That's pretty neat.An intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
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Originally posted by Qqmike View PostI think KDE Partition Editor is fine. Yet, many of us consider GParted (Live CD/USB) to be a/the gold standard.
Originally posted by Qqmike View PostYes, you can. (Using GParted Live CD) you can make any partitions you want, any formats, and you can keep your data anywhere you wish. Most people make a separate partition for their /home. Some people make separate Data partition(s) and point to them (by links), accessing all their data/information that way, from one or from more than one of their OSs (including sharing such data with a Windows OS).
Originally posted by Qqmike View PostSounds like you have a good system. You can also, at any time, start a new thread on this Data-partition issue and get some good ideas from people who do it. (I simply use a separate /home partition for EACH of my OSs -- but then, I have a simple setup with simple data needs: for each OS, I make two partitions: (root) / and /home; I make one swap partition on the HDD to share among any/several of my Kubuntu OSs.))
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The GParted website has all sorts of good stuff, how-to's, FAQ. An often overlooked page is the Features -- actually, the capabilities, nice summary table:
http://gparted.org/features.php
http://gparted.org/livecd.phpAn intellectual says a simple thing in a hard way. An artist says a hard thing in a simple way. Charles Bukowski
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
- 9524
- Seattle, WA, USA
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Originally posted by RLynwood View PostKDE Partition Editor seems fine to me, too. But I didn't know that you, KDE people, considered Gparted that highly.
Qqmike's advice about partitioning before installing is the more important bit of good advice here. Parted, the partitioning tool incorporated in the *buntu installer, is really rather poor. It has trouble handing anything beyond the basics.
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Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostPeople here will have differing preferences. KDE's partition editor received some updates a while back that enable it to work with GPT disks, so feature wise, it's equivalent to Gparted. I don't use either of them; I prefer the command line for managing disks and partitions.
Qqmike's advice about partitioning before installing is the more important bit of good advice here. Parted, the partitioning tool incorporated in the *buntu installer, is really rather poor. It has trouble handing anything beyond the basics.
after all both Gparted and Partitionmanager(KDE's partition manager) are based on libparted2 ,,,,,,,,,,,I think
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
- 9524
- Seattle, WA, USA
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Originally posted by vinnywright View Postafter all both Gparted and Partitionmanager(KDE's partition manager) are based on libparted2 ,,,,,,,,,,,I think
Code:steve@t520:~$ [B]apt-cache rdepends libparted2[/B] libparted2 Reverse Depends: libvirt-bin libvirt-bin libparted2:i386 libparted2:i386 udisks python3-parted-dbg python3-parted python-parted-dbg python-parted [COLOR="#B22222"]partitionmanager[/COLOR] nwipe libparted-i18n libparted-i18n kvpm gnu-fdisk fatresize ubiquity parted libvirt-bin libparted2-dbg libparted-fs-resize0 libparted-dev [COLOR="#B22222"]gparted[/COLOR]
Originally posted by vinnywright View PostI think it is more the ,,,,,,,handling of parted by the *buntu installer than parted it's self.
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