On 2013-06-09 10:45, Leszek Lesner wrote: > Am Sonntag, 9. Juni 2013, 12:29:11 schrieb Ali Linx: >> On Sun, Jun 9, 2013 at 7:16 AM, Nio Wiklund <nio.wikl...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> I normally use the manual partitioner because I make the partitions with >>> gparted before I install. I think that it helps to use something to help >>> manage the memory during the install process, normal swap or zRAM. >> >> +1 >> You are not alone. I never, ever, ever, ever install UNLESS I plan my >> partition scheme and do it BEFORE I do the installation. THAT IS the best >> approach. WHOEVER in doubt, ask the experts at Ubuntu Forums :) >> >> >> I can easily imagine, that moving swap could create problems. I would >> >>> never try that in the installer, when there is a much better tool, >>> gparted. >> >> +1 >> Preciously!!!!! > > Gparted is used in ubiquity aswell btw. :P
The same engine but with a more difficult interface and I guess with some other processes running and filling the RAM. >> >> Why would someone do that during the installation process? and then blame >> the installation process if it will crash? that is totally crazy if you ask >> me! > > I don't think it enables the swap partition right away. > I agree. In that case you might need to open a terminal and 'sudo swapon' the newly made swap partition. (If the swap move didn't crash the system.) -- Lubuntu-users mailing list Lubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/lubuntu-users