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#1 2011-08-07 13:08:57

TakisX
Member
Registered: 2011-08-07
Posts: 7

Using swap and home partition of ubuntu

Can i do that ?

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#2 2011-08-07 13:21:09

Ramses de Norre
Member
From: Leuven - Belgium
Registered: 2007-03-27
Posts: 1,289

Re: Using swap and home partition of ubuntu

Swap: yes, if you do not hibernate ubuntu and then boot arch or vice versa.
Home: not recommended, you'll run into conflicts due to dot-file format differences when the versions of programs differ between arch and ubuntu.

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#3 2011-08-07 14:50:06

Xappe
Member
Registered: 2008-05-17
Posts: 105

Re: Using swap and home partition of ubuntu

Ramses de Norre wrote:

Home: not recommended, you'll run into conflicts due to dot-file format differences when the versions of programs differ between arch and ubuntu.

If you use the same partition I would use different usernames on the systems to avoid conflicts.


vanum est vobis ante lucem surgere

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#4 2011-08-07 15:08:21

Shark
Member
From: /dev/zero
Registered: 2011-02-28
Posts: 686

Re: Using swap and home partition of ubuntu

Some time ago i had a common home folder for Arch and Ubuntu. I had only one problem and that was with the rhythmbox because of a newer version in Arch- as pointed by Ramses de Norre. But all other stuff worked.


If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put foundations under them.
Henry David Thoreau

Registered Linux User: #559057

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#5 2011-08-07 20:38:10

Dumbledore
Member
From: Mumbai, India
Registered: 2011-04-27
Posts: 56

Re: Using swap and home partition of ubuntu

Xappe's idea is good. You can use separate names for the users which shall take care of the dot-files. But then you may run into permission errors unless you make your files world-read/write/execut-able.

The other thing that you can probably do is:

Resize your /home in ubuntu using gparted into a very small partition and extract most of it's capacity into a partition you can call "Common". Mount this at /media/common and add this to the fstab of each distro and keep your data in this. Make sure you use different user names as Xappe suggested.

If you have a backup drive, this should be a fairly straight-forward process. You will however have to clean most of the bulk for gparted to be able to resize it.


GNU/Linux: Keep your options "open".

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