[Bug 376765] Re: Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

2014-03-13 Thread Launchpad Bug Tracker
[Expired for ubiquity (Ubuntu) because there has been no activity for 60
days.]

** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
   Status: Incomplete = Expired

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Title:
  Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

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[Bug 376765] Re: Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

2014-01-11 Thread Phillip Susi
Your description reads like a novel that I can not quite follow.  Can
you provide a set of steps to reproduce the problem?


** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
   Status: New = Incomplete

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Title:
  Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

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[Bug 376765] Re: Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

2012-11-05 Thread Colin Watson
** Package changed: partitioner (Ubuntu) = ubiquity (Ubuntu)

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Title:
  Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

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[Bug 376765] Re: Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

2012-11-05 Thread OldeFoxx
I use multiple drives in a couple of desktops, and still have 9.04 on
them.   I also use VirtualBox and have Windows 2000 Pro installed.  And
by some coincidence, I divide each into three Ubuntu Partitions and have
three swap partitions, one for each Ubuntu partition.  Maybe I am doing
things differently.  First, I also use manual mode, and partition the
whole drive during the first install.  That means I set up all the
partitions on the first go around, then I install Ubuntu on the third
and leave the other two unused. I have only the third swap designated as
swap.  That over, I go back around and do the second partition and the
second swap.  Then on the third go around I do the first partition and
the first swap.  I recall that I could see multiple drives when I did
this, but I figured three Ubuntu Partitions were enough for my purpose,
The second hard drive was just divided up into two Windows 2000 Pro
partitions.

I always ran into issues when I did this, mostly because the drives were
not pristine.  Because one partition or another might fail at some
point, I spent a lot of time in recovery efforts to get my data back.  I
ended up sharing the drives as Shared Folders under VirtualBox, and
moved data about, mostly making multiple copies of my VDI files on each
drive.

I learned to use a gparted.iso image I found online to manage my drives
when I had trouble booting up.  It helped a lot.  But I am not informed
enough to use the recovery mode to get back a failed installation if you
try to boot Ubuntu anyway.  You get to a certain point in the process,
you have to tell it what to do next or take over manually.  Should be a
book written on the subject of what to do then.

I am now using 10.04 LTS on my laptop, which I upgraded to a 1TB drive.
They are more plentiful now and the prices have gone down to $100 or
less.  I got two for a total price of under $176.  That gives me a
spare.  I had also bought a 1TB My Passport for under $100 that is also
2.5 in size.  That is small enough to sit under my laptop on a lap
board that has a mount built up of three layers of paint sticks that I
got for free from a hardware store.  Had to pay for the white glue to
bond them together of course.  I did not buy the drives all at once,
just as I felt I could afford them.  I interlace the paint sticks to
ensure there is good air flow between them.  Don't want the laptop to
get too hot.

Anyway I now have a 17 laptop with a 1TB internal and 1TB external
drive connected.  The external drive is formatted NTFS  still and I just
copy files to it.  The internal 1TB is divided into 3 Ubuntu partitions
and now I only use one swap partition, not three.  That's a total of
four partitions for the internal drive.  I know you can get away with
more than four partitions on a hard drive, but I decided to  try just
four, and it works fine.  I had thought the matter through again, and
while in theory you can have more than one Windows 2000 Pro up and
running at once, you are limited by the devices such as the DVD/CD drive
and external drive as to what can be shared.  Besides if you want access
to the files on a different client, just mount that client as an
alternative under Storage in your settings.  That way you only have to
deal with one instance of Windows 2000 Pro at a time.

I've also used the NTFS drive and other two partitions under Ubuntu to
house my /home folders and files, in preparation for totally
reformatting one of the Ubuntu partitions if I suspect partition
problems.  Otherwise, I might just reinstall over the existing version
with the same or later version and elect not to reformat that partition
as part of the install.  The only folders and files replaces have to do
with the system, and the others are fine as they are.  Of course
reinstalling Ubuntu means also having to reinstall VirtualBox and other
added packages, but you get the knack of it after awhile.

I'm just passing on my experiences.  What I can tell you is super
important if you don't want to keep wasting your time repeating yourself
is to work with the best drives you can get or afford.  I even wrote a
comment under suggestions with Oracle is that they ought to make using
VirtualBox redundant so that it one VDI file fails for any reason, you
have a clone there to keep working with, and it goes further by
producing a new clone of itself so that the redundancy keeps moving
forward.  You don't have that as a feature, so you have to take some
time to keep the cloning process going on your own.

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Title:
  Partition Problems with Install Process with 9.04

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