Linux Support
Linux Support
In the true nature of open source, this is for the community and by the community. Regardless of experiance if you have questions or need help with linux, here is the place.
*Computers are alot like air-conditioners. They work great until you open windows*
windows should see it as either an unknown or unformated partition. If your using XP right click my computer, select manage, then disk management. you'll see the partition, format it and poof it should be returned for your use.
Repairing your MBR (gettting rid of dual boot menu) is trickier. You have to use your XP disk skip the first time it offers to get you into the repair console and accept the second time it offers to. Then there is a dos utility that you will have access to that will rewrite your MBR as a single boot system.
Repairing your MBR (gettting rid of dual boot menu) is trickier. You have to use your XP disk skip the first time it offers to get you into the repair console and accept the second time it offers to. Then there is a dos utility that you will have access to that will rewrite your MBR as a single boot system.
*Computers are alot like air-conditioners. They work great until you open windows*
- Kyle Ironbane
- Noob
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Mon Jun 05, 2006 12:18 am
- Location: The Hills of Northern New Jersey
Lets see, I've killed my windows partition so now I have one big one for OS x 120 gigs or so, and then I load up the live cd, theres an install linux shortcut so I click that one and go through a few steps then when I get to the partitioner I try to make a new partition for Linux then it asked for things like /swap , /home /boot
From there I get confused and quit to find out I gotta reinstall OS X, so I do.
From there I get confused and quit to find out I gotta reinstall OS X, so I do.
The Silver Striders
- Mr. O'Dearly
- Developer
- Posts: 655
- Joined: Mon Feb 27, 2006 4:28 am
It's been a while since I did this but it should go roughly along the lines of this:
Get to the screen that asks you to make partitions.
There should be a graphical display of your hard disk near the top of the screen.
There are different ways you can partition your disk.
I believe you typically make a "/", "/home", and a "/swap" partition.
The swap isn't entirely necessary for all hardware. It's basically used so that your computer can pretend it has more ram than it really does. If you've got lots of ram, swap won't do much. I've got 1 gig ram and my swap never gets used.
Your "/" partition holds the important stuff that make your computer go.
It's also where (at least for me) stuff gets downloaded to. (/tmp is there)
I think the setup I used advised me to put 2-3 gigs into "/". Now that I've had some experience I'd say you're going to want more than that. If I were to repartition, I'd put at least 7-8 gigs into "/".
Your /home partition is where all your personal stuff goes and is generally the biggest.
I believe you CAN setup everything on just a / partition but it's not advised because having multiple partitions can help you recover if something goes wrong with one of them.
It should also give options on how to format each partition. I don't know much about most of them. I chose ext3 (i think ) and that worked out fine for me.
So, select your partitions, sizes, and format and that should be mostly all for that step.
Note that you shouldn't necessarily have to uninstall your other OS. If you leave your other OS on, you can choose to create your linux partition in unused space on your hard disk.
Don't give up! It probably took me at least 3 or 4 attempts to make sense of everything, and even then I re-formatted and re-installed a couple times as I found out more stuff and changed my mind.
If anyone sees anything I missed or said wrong, feel free to add!
Get to the screen that asks you to make partitions.
There should be a graphical display of your hard disk near the top of the screen.
There are different ways you can partition your disk.
I believe you typically make a "/", "/home", and a "/swap" partition.
The swap isn't entirely necessary for all hardware. It's basically used so that your computer can pretend it has more ram than it really does. If you've got lots of ram, swap won't do much. I've got 1 gig ram and my swap never gets used.
Your "/" partition holds the important stuff that make your computer go.
It's also where (at least for me) stuff gets downloaded to. (/tmp is there)
I think the setup I used advised me to put 2-3 gigs into "/". Now that I've had some experience I'd say you're going to want more than that. If I were to repartition, I'd put at least 7-8 gigs into "/".
Your /home partition is where all your personal stuff goes and is generally the biggest.
I believe you CAN setup everything on just a / partition but it's not advised because having multiple partitions can help you recover if something goes wrong with one of them.
It should also give options on how to format each partition. I don't know much about most of them. I chose ext3 (i think ) and that worked out fine for me.
So, select your partitions, sizes, and format and that should be mostly all for that step.
Note that you shouldn't necessarily have to uninstall your other OS. If you leave your other OS on, you can choose to create your linux partition in unused space on your hard disk.
Don't give up! It probably took me at least 3 or 4 attempts to make sense of everything, and even then I re-formatted and re-installed a couple times as I found out more stuff and changed my mind.
If anyone sees anything I missed or said wrong, feel free to add!
Video drivers. They tend not to include proprietary stuff in the install disks (nVidia and ATI later drivers).
Tep wrote:I login and there's a dwarf to kill. You can't ask for much more than that.
Alkapwn wrote:NC has the most amazing melee build there is. Its a friggin unstopable juggernaut of pain.
Alright, I found linux drivers to my card, do I want linux x86 or linux x86_64 ?
I get this error upon trying to install drivers:
Could not open the file /home/zero/Desktop/ati-d…ler-8.34.8-x86.x86_64.run.
gedit has not been able to detect the character coding.
Please check that you are not trying to open a binary file.
Select a character coding from the menu and try again.
I get this error upon trying to install drivers:
Could not open the file /home/zero/Desktop/ati-d…ler-8.34.8-x86.x86_64.run.
gedit has not been able to detect the character coding.
Please check that you are not trying to open a binary file.
Select a character coding from the menu and try again.
The Silver Striders