Something; an important 'somerthing'; that I haven't see mentioned in this thread (might be somewhere and I just missed it) is the maximum number of Primary partitions you can have, which is 4. Looking at the graphical report of your drive, I see 4 partitions 'in use' and an unallocated area of the drive containing 145.87 GB. Even though the Windows Disk Management utility is showing what looks like four partitions, even identifying two of them as Primary Partitions, as well as a Recovery Partition and a System Partition, we really need to know how Linux (Kubuntu) sees the drive layout, as there may be additional preparation required on the Windows side.
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Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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Originally posted by Snowhog View PostSomething; an important 'somerthing'; that I haven't see mentioned in this thread (might be somewhere and I just missed it) is the maximum number of Primary partitions you can have, which is 4. Looking at the graphical report of your drive, I see 4 partitions 'in use' and an unallocated area of the drive containing 145.87 GB. Even though the Windows Disk Management utility is showing what looks like four partitions, even identifying two of them as Primary Partitions, as well as a Recovery Partition and a System Partition, we really need to know how Linux (Kubuntu) sees the drive layout, as there may be additional preparation required on the Windows side.
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Originally posted by oshunluvr View PostThis doesn't apply as he's using a GPT partitioned disk. See post #5 and notice 6 partitions and no Extended partition. This is not possible unless one is using GPT.Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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Originally posted by Robert24 View PostJust in case it wouldn't be obvious, of course I don't ask you to answer to everything. But if some of you have the impression that it's more or less the way to proceed or not at all, I would be glad to hear it.
I looked a bit online and found the following answers for some of my question:
b) It looks like 20GB should be enough for the root. Some people on quora say that 10 is enough so 20 seems ok.
d) Given the fact that my memory is of the SSD type, it shouldn't influence the speed of computation.
Re. c) You will have no trouble accessing your Windows files. It will only be a matter of choosing which way works best for you. This is better discussed after you're running Kubuntu.
Re. d) Actually, the opposite can be true. In this case, a single drive system, there will be zero difference in file access times (computational time is something entirely different). In the olden days of IDE drives, one could actually speed up file access by spreading various parts of the installation on separate drives using separate IDE channels. This is no longer needed as the interface is no longer the bottleneck.
Re. e) The answer to this depend on which tools you use to create the partitions. All the graphical tools have the option to enter a label. I tend to use descriptive ones that make sense - "root" or "kubuntu" for the install and "home" or "my_data" for home, etc.
And now for 12a, which is really about 1 through 11:
1,2,3) Minor point, but most modern computers allow a boot to a USB device without powering off or editing BIOS. Most have a key you simple hold down during reboot that invokes a temporary boot menu - Usually F8. Otherwise, yes, the BIOS will allow you to enable USB boot.
4,5,6,8) Mostly correct - as I pointed out above you may want to adjust to 20GB upward slightly.
7) The main point from that article to be taken away is HIBERNATION. If you don't actually hibernate your computer, 20GB is ridiculously large, If you "suspend" you aren't hibernating. I rarely use Linux laptops, by I'm pretty sure the default lid-close action is suspend, not hibernate. Frankly - just my biased opinion here - "Hibernate" was invented for Windows users because it takes too dang long to boot up. My Linux machine here boots from cold-start to log in in about 22 seconds and that's with 11 seconds of artificial delay because of my BIOS and grub settings. Hibernation would maybe save me 2-3 seconds. Not worth it.
9) Yes. Actually, the greeting screen has two choices - "Try Kubuntu" or "Install Kubuntu", you can install later if you choose "Try..." or just install from the get-go.
10,11) The second screen in the install menu is this:
Selecting "Manual" get you this:
From here, you click on the partition in question - obviously yours will have more than this example - and choose "Change". The menu presented will allow formatting options (which you can ignore if you've pre-formatted your partitions) and "Use as:" which lets you choose many from many options or create your own. You can see / and /home are in there;
You can ignore your other extra partitions for now, just focus on root and home. Swap, if existing prior to installation, will be automatically detected and used.
One very small comment: I always suggest to posters that precise terminology is extremely helpful when requesting help. You might try to refer to RAM as "memory" but hard drives, SSDs, USB drives, etc. as "storage". Running out of storage (for files) is entirely different than running out of RAM (memory) for processing. This word mix-up is a common occurrence, but every bit of precision can help when communicating across the internet, hours, miles, and languages.
Finally; You are not causing the least bit of trouble nor need you apologize. All of us hang out here to give and get help and we have all been in your shoes at one point or another. Welcome to Linux, Kubuntu, and of course, this Kubuntu Forum.Last edited by oshunluvr; Feb 06, 2018, 11:01 AM.
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Originally posted by Snowhog View PostAh. Good to know. In the words of Gilda Radner's character Emily Litella, "Never Mind."
I converted all my drives to GPT (except the btrfs ones that use the full device) 3 years ago. Nice to be away from those restrictions and limitations. But that's another topic...
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And this is kind of obvious, but I'll drop it anyway:
When you set a label on a partition, like my_data, for example, you would open your partition tool (GParted, KDE Partition Manager, etc.), allow it to show you your disk, identify the partition you want to place a label on, highlight that partition, and now look for a tab or a menu, probably called Partition, and in that Partition menu you should see "Label," which you would click on, and follow the instructions that pop-up for typing in the label.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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To all of you, thank you so much for this amazingly detailed answers! Now I feel much more confident about this re-installation.
There are two more things I wanted to ask:
1) About Hibernation, I don't know if what I was using before was hibernation or sleep. I remember that when it was in this state, the screen was turned off, and to restart the computer, I had to press on the power button (touching the touchpad wasn't enough). It wasn't using much energy and I used to find if very convenient when I had to interrupt a task I was performing for an hour or two. I'm pretty sure it was the default setting of Kubuntu 16.04 when one closes the lid. If it was sleep, then I don't need hibernation but if it was hibernation, then I would be happy to keep it even if it costs 20GB of storage.
2) I'm a bit concerned about the partition which seem to be responsible for the choice between the different OS at the beginning when I start my computer. I would be quite happy if it could be like before. It seemed that there was a problem with this also since I got this GRUB console popping out instead of the usual menu. Will I need to fix something related to this during my installation or this will be done automatically?
For the sake of information, here is a screenshot of mz kde partition manager before I touched the partitions:
and one after I deleted the old kubuntu partition
Best and thanks again.
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I did 1) to 8) but when I pressed apply in KDE partition manager, I had a problem with Plasma. Here are two screenshots.
and
And I realised that I had had a similar problem with plasma when my previous problem appeared. And when I think about it, I had several times this kind of plasma error popping out when I was using kubuntu (before I tried to extend it). It was mainly when I was closing some program so I didn t really care at the time. But maybe this explains the total mess that I had here.
I reopened kde partition manager and obtained this screen which seems to indicate that things when smoothly>
Best
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Yup, the partition manager is showing you have your three partitions set up.Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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The KDE partition manager in the 16.04 live usb is old. It has issues with manipulations on gpt drives
I suggest installing gparted. Open a terminal and type
sudo apt install gparted
This is only for the live environment. You can then run gparted.
Once you successfully install kunbuntu we can show you how to upgrade the KDE applications.
Sent from my ONEPLUS A5010 using Tapatalk
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Hello everyone,
I followed the indications of oshunluvr in his post #94 and it seemed to work. When I shut down my computer, removed the live key, and restarted it, Windows booted (without giving me the choice to choose ubuntu). So I shut it down, when it the bios, and put ubuntu as the priority in the startup menu, then pressed f10 -> yes. But then this grub terminal that I mentioned before reappeared.
Does anyone have an idea what is the next step?
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Deactivate secure boot in your bios if not done.
If that does not work, go back to the Live usb and run parted from the terminal
sudo parted -l
We will inspect the output and see what it looks like.
Sent from my ONEPLUS A5010 using Tapatalk
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Robert it never occurred to me to check this but when you boot your kunbuntu live cd, what is the very first screen you see?
Is it a black screen with a box and white text that gives you the choice to boot or install ?
Or is it screen with colors and pictures that gives you the choice to boot or install?
Sent from my ONEPLUS A5010 using Tapatalk
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Hello mr_raider.
The ouput of sudo parted -l is
Code:Model: ATA SAMSUNG MZ7LN512 (scsi) Disk /dev/sda: 512GB Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B Partition Table: gpt Disk Flags: Number Start End Size File system Name Flags 1 1049kB 274MB 273MB fat32 EFI system partition boot, hidden, esp 2 274MB 290MB 16.8MB Microsoft reserved partition msftres 3 290MB 287GB 286GB ntfs Basic data partition msftdata 5 287GB 313GB 26.2GB ext4 6 313GB 486GB 173GB ext4 7 486GB 490GB 4295MB linux-swap(v1) 8 490GB 511GB 21.2GB ext4 4 511GB 512GB 1049MB ntfs Basic data partition hidden, diag Warning: The driver descriptor says the physical block size is 2048 bytes, but Linux says it is 512 bytes.
Concerning the first screens that I see when I boot from the live cd here is what I see:
1) The Lenovo logo (this was always my first screen)
2) A black screen with some little white drawing at the bottom (a kind of equation where there is a bar on the left, cut by a kind of silhouette, then equal sign, then a silhouette with a circle around it).
3) Some messages appearing briefly with white letters on black background which says (I took a picture with my phone and I will copy the content here)
Code:[ 0.188543] ACPI Error: [_PPC] Namespace lookup failure, AE_ALREADY_EXISTS (20160938/dswload-378) [ 0.188645] ACPI Exception: AE_ALREADY_EXISTS, During name lookup/catalog (20160930/psobject-227)
The ouput of sudo parted -l is
Code:Model: ATA SAMSUNG MZ7LN512 (scsi) Disk /dev/sda: 512GB Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B Partition Table: gpt Disk Flags: Number Start End Size File system Name Flags 1 1049kB 274MB 273MB fat32 EFI system partition boot, hidden, esp 2 274MB 290MB 16.8MB Microsoft reserved partition msftres 3 290MB 287GB 286GB ntfs Basic data partition msftdata 5 287GB 313GB 26.2GB ext4 6 313GB 486GB 173GB ext4 7 486GB 490GB 4295MB linux-swap(v1) 8 490GB 511GB 21.2GB ext4 4 511GB 512GB 1049MB ntfs Basic data partition hidden, diag Warning: The driver descriptor says the physical block size is 2048 bytes, but Linux says it is 512 bytes.
Concerning the first screens that I see when I boot from the live cd here is what I see:
1) The Lenovo logo (this was always my first screen)
2) A black screen with some little white drawing at the bottom (a kind of equation where there is a bar on the left, cut by a kind of silhouette, then equal sign, then a silhouette with a circle around it).
3) Some messages appearing briefly with white letters on black background which says (I took a picture with my phone and I will copy the content here)
Code:[ 0.188543] ACPI Error: [_PPC] Namespace lookup failure, AE_ALREADY_EXISTS (20160938/dswload-378) [ 0.188645] ACPI Exception: AE_ALREADY_EXISTS, During name lookup
But the thing is this last screen doesn't last long. Maybe one second, and then the live kubuntu session opens itself without me having selected anything.
4) A screen with kubuntu written (white on black)
5) Again some console error messages (around 10 this time). I will copy only the first two and I replace some numbers by *numbers*
Code:ffff978b6f1b9320), AE_NOT_FOUND (20160930/psparse-543) [ *numbers*] ACPI Error: Method parse/execution failed [\_PR.CPU4._CPC] (Node fff978b6f1b9dc0), AE_NOT_FOUND (*numbers*/psparse-543) [ *numbers*] ACPI Error: [CPC1] Namespace lookup failure, AE_NOT_FOUND (*numbers*/psargs-359)
Here is the picture I used (but it's not very readable):
6) There is indeed a screen with plenty of colors which gives me the possibility to choose between test and install.
But the thing is this last screen doesn't last long. Maybe one second, and then the live kubuntu session opens itself without me having selected anything.Last edited by Robert24; Feb 07, 2018, 02:25 AM.
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