I have a 160-Gb drive that has Win2K in its own 40-Gb partition; the rest of the disk is unformatted and free.
I want to set up partitions so that I can install multiple distributions of (K)(U)buntu. As an example, I would like to install Ubuntu 6.06 LTS and/or Kubuntu 6.06 LTS and, in a separate partition, Kubuntu Feisty Fawn. I have several questions.
(1) Rather than having separate partitions for Ubuntu / Kubuntu would I be better off with ONE partition and install both DESKTOPS?
(2) I want to manually partition the remaining 120-Gb of the drive so that I can have a /boot partition, a /home partition, a /swap partition, etc. Since the distros that I plan to install are so similar, can I share partitions among the various distros? In other words, can I use the same /home partition for each of the versions of K/Ubuntu? Can I use the same /swap partition and the same /boot partition? If so, how should I set up the various partitions? I don't mean how should I PHYSICALLY create the partitions: I know how to do that. I mean what partitions do I need to set up so that all two/three distributions can co-exist, but share what partitions I can.
(3) If instead of Feisty Fawn I wanted to install Knoppix or SuSE or Red Hat (a disto sufficiently different from K/Ubuntu) what problems could I expect? Could I share partitions with the "foreign" distribution.
(4) I tried to install Kubuntu 6.06 in a dual boot with Win2K today, and when i got to the point of partitioning the drive I had three choices:
a. Partition the entire drive (which would defeat the dual-boot and wipe out Win2k);
b. Partition the largest contiguous space (or something like that); or
c. Manually partition the drive.
I tried (b) and it used the rest of the drive to install Kubuntu successfully. Then when I tried to boot to Windows on restart, it showed me the GRUB menu as it should have, but I got the Blue Screen Of Death. It let me boot into Linux, so it must have something to do with the boot manager. Where do I start in straightening out this mess?
I would appreciate any guidance regarding the above 4 questions. TIA.
I want to set up partitions so that I can install multiple distributions of (K)(U)buntu. As an example, I would like to install Ubuntu 6.06 LTS and/or Kubuntu 6.06 LTS and, in a separate partition, Kubuntu Feisty Fawn. I have several questions.
(1) Rather than having separate partitions for Ubuntu / Kubuntu would I be better off with ONE partition and install both DESKTOPS?
(2) I want to manually partition the remaining 120-Gb of the drive so that I can have a /boot partition, a /home partition, a /swap partition, etc. Since the distros that I plan to install are so similar, can I share partitions among the various distros? In other words, can I use the same /home partition for each of the versions of K/Ubuntu? Can I use the same /swap partition and the same /boot partition? If so, how should I set up the various partitions? I don't mean how should I PHYSICALLY create the partitions: I know how to do that. I mean what partitions do I need to set up so that all two/three distributions can co-exist, but share what partitions I can.
(3) If instead of Feisty Fawn I wanted to install Knoppix or SuSE or Red Hat (a disto sufficiently different from K/Ubuntu) what problems could I expect? Could I share partitions with the "foreign" distribution.
(4) I tried to install Kubuntu 6.06 in a dual boot with Win2K today, and when i got to the point of partitioning the drive I had three choices:
a. Partition the entire drive (which would defeat the dual-boot and wipe out Win2k);
b. Partition the largest contiguous space (or something like that); or
c. Manually partition the drive.
I tried (b) and it used the rest of the drive to install Kubuntu successfully. Then when I tried to boot to Windows on restart, it showed me the GRUB menu as it should have, but I got the Blue Screen Of Death. It let me boot into Linux, so it must have something to do with the boot manager. Where do I start in straightening out this mess?
I would appreciate any guidance regarding the above 4 questions. TIA.
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