On Mi, 08 ian 20, 20:48:53, Linux-Fan wrote:
>
> * A single swap partition from other (actively used or not) installations.
> In this case, changing the UUID _breaks_ all other installations at the
> expense of the new installation. I agree that sharing a swap space is
> bad with suspend-to-
On Wed, Jan 08, 2020 at 05:04:27PM +, ct wrote:
Other than Pascal’s ‘feature’ - I assume he does not like it either -
we still do not have a valid reason.
Unless one of the debian-installer maintainers happens to be reading
this mailing list, you're just going to get educated guesses. It wo
On Wed 08 Jan 2020 at 20:48:53 (+0100), Linux-Fan wrote:
> Michael Stone writes:
>
> > […] Perhaps some discussion sent to the BTS about alternate
> > behaviors would be useful, rather than just rants that "something" is
> > "broken"?
>
> I am not the OP, yet I have often wondered about this beha
Jude DaShiell composed on 2020-01-08 14:35 (UTC-0500):
> With sufficient memory above 1GB probably a swap file could be created
> by an installer
For an installation that /requires/ swap, due to a limited RAM target, simply to
proceed, an extra swap from the target freespace could be created in a
Michael Stone writes:
This all dates from the days when 1) you might actually need swap to
complete an install and 2) swap was utilized by partition name and not a
UUID. It's reasonable to wonder if the installer still needs to be so
aggressive about swap space. There's a bug (842409) dating fro
installation scripts to handle
though.
On Wed, 8 Jan 2020, ct wrote:
> Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2020 12:04:27
> From: ct
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: Debian Graphical Installer: why does it format swap?
> Resent-Date: Wed, 8 Jan 2020 17:21:09 + (UTC)
> Resent
This all dates from the days when 1) you might actually need swap to
complete an install and 2) swap was utilized by partition name and
not a UUID. It's reasonable to wonder if the installer still needs to be
so aggressive about swap space. There's a bug (842409) dating from 2016
regarding this
I do understand your frustration, the Manual option for the Debian
Installer is complex.
It took me a while to absorb, and understand... see further comment below
On 1/8/20 9:04 AM, ct wrote:
Hello all
It is good to see a few comments and help following my original post.
I had set aside a fe
Hello all
It is good to see a few comments and help following my original post. I
had set aside a few days to try out the Debian system and repositories
but sorting out the effect on my main system and finding the cause has
used up those days. I now have to return my kit to normal set-up and
On Sun 05 Jan 2020 at 12:42:05 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
> Clod Turner composed on 2020-01-05 15:40 (UTC):
>
> > no matter what options you try to select in the
> > partitioning dialogue, the installer will always reformat swap and
> > therefore swap gets a new UUID.
>
> Not true. There's anoth
that reformat "feature" is hateful. I fail to see any advantage.
It does break the other systems, but they can be recovered by editing
you fstab file with the New UUID as you know.
I use the Manual mode... _auto installers never seem to get it right_
(my way).
*Using Manual, select existing
On Sun, 5 Jan 2020 19:22:58 +0100
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 05/01/2020 à 18:50, Joe a écrit :
> >
> > Windows uses a swap file, not a separate partition. We are told that
> > there is no performance penalty for Linux to do so also.
>
> Using a swap file can cause a performance penalty if the
Le 05/01/2020 à 18:50, Joe a écrit :
Windows uses a swap file, not a separate partition. We are told that
there is no performance penalty for Linux to do so also.
Using a swap file can cause a performance penalty if the file is heavily
fragmented. Granted, it also applies to a fragmented LVM
On Sun, 5 Jan 2020 15:40:56 +
Clod Turner wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> Longer version of the question : –
>
> Why does the Debian Graphical installer compromise any other Linux
> install on the same HDD/SSD by reformatting swap. I doubt that it
> affects Windows since it does not use swap (I do
Clod Turner composed on 2020-01-05 15:40 (UTC):
> no matter what options you try to select in the
> partitioning dialogue, the installer will always reformat swap and
> therefore swap gets a new UUID.
Not true. There's another selectable option I always use: create no swap. /If/
swap is actually
Le 05/01/2020 à 16:40, Clod Turner a écrit :
Why does the Debian Graphical installer compromise any other Linux install
on the same HDD/SSD by reformatting swap.
This is a well known long standing "feature" of the Debian installer. It
is not specific to the graphical installer. Also it does n
Hello all,
Longer version of the question : –
Why does the Debian Graphical installer compromise any other Linux install
on the same HDD/SSD by reformatting swap. I doubt that it affects Windows
since it does not use swap (I do not have any Windows installed so cannot
test).
I used debian-10.2.0
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