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#76
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 11:06:53 -0500, "BillW50" wrote:
In , glee typed: "Achilles" wrote in message ... On 09/12/2012 07:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: Live Cds for Ubuntu and Mint will automatically use a swap partition if they see a linux swap partition on the local disk. No harm could ever come from this. Yes, already mentioned.... but that is not the Windows page file, which is what BillW50 *claims* a Linux Live CD uses. Actually I am just the messenger. I am still looking for that post that someone told me what Linux can do to a Windows install (including using the Windows swapfile). I thought it was back in 2009 on a newsgroup after I told my horror story with Ubuntu Live. I did find another post on the Dell newsgroup back in August of 2011 which I totally forgotten about. As Monica's Windows started failing to boot. Somebody mentioned to use Ubuntu Live to pull off her important files off of the drive. I warned Monica not to use Ubuntu, as Ubuntu Live burned me with a Windows drive before. She didn't listen and Ubuntu Live read her hard drive and then later toasted it where nothing could read the drive after that. Still looking for that post. maybe he told me on the eeeuser forum or something and I am looking in the wrong place, i.e. newsgroups. :-( What usually happens in cases like this is, if you keep up your search, you'll eventually find what you've been looking for and you'll present it to the group in a grand 'A Ha!' and 'Ta Da!' moment. Next, someone will point out that it doesn't actually say what you thought it said, and therefore it hurts your case rather than helps it. And around and around we go, with the cycle starting again at the beginning. |
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#77
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 12:29:52 -0500, "Char Jackson"
wrote in article ... On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 11:06:53 -0500, "BillW50" wrote: In , glee typed: "Achilles" wrote in message ... On 09/12/2012 07:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: Live Cds for Ubuntu and Mint will automatically use a swap partition if they see a linux swap partition on the local disk. No harm could ever come from this. Yes, already mentioned.... but that is not the Windows page file, which is what BillW50 *claims* a Linux Live CD uses. Actually I am just the messenger. I am still looking for that post that someone told me what Linux can do to a Windows install (including using the Windows swapfile). I thought it was back in 2009 on a newsgroup after I told my horror story with Ubuntu Live. I did find another post on the Dell newsgroup back in August of 2011 which I totally forgotten about. As Monica's Windows started failing to boot. Somebody mentioned to use Ubuntu Live to pull off her important files off of the drive. I warned Monica not to use Ubuntu, as Ubuntu Live burned me with a Windows drive before. She didn't listen and Ubuntu Live read her hard drive and then later toasted it where nothing could read the drive after that. Still looking for that post. maybe he told me on the eeeuser forum or something and I am looking in the wrong place, i.e. newsgroups. :-( What usually happens in cases like this is, if you keep up your search, you'll eventually find what you've been looking for and you'll present it to the group in a grand 'A Ha!' and 'Ta Da!' moment. Next, someone will point out that it doesn't actually say what you thought it said, and therefore it hurts your case rather than helps it. And around and around we go, with the cycle starting again at the beginning. +1 -- Zaphod Vell, Zaphod's just zis guy, ya know? - Gag Halfrunt |
#78
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
In ,
Zaphod Beeblebrox typed: On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 12:29:52 -0500, "Char Jackson" wrote in article ... On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 11:06:53 -0500, "BillW50" wrote: In , glee typed: "Achilles" wrote in message ... On 09/12/2012 07:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: Live Cds for Ubuntu and Mint will automatically use a swap partition if they see a linux swap partition on the local disk. No harm could ever come from this. Yes, already mentioned.... but that is not the Windows page file, which is what BillW50 *claims* a Linux Live CD uses. Actually I am just the messenger. I am still looking for that post that someone told me what Linux can do to a Windows install (including using the Windows swapfile). I thought it was back in 2009 on a newsgroup after I told my horror story with Ubuntu Live. I did find another post on the Dell newsgroup back in August of 2011 which I totally forgotten about. As Monica's Windows started failing to boot. Somebody mentioned to use Ubuntu Live to pull off her important files off of the drive. I warned Monica not to use Ubuntu, as Ubuntu Live burned me with a Windows drive before. She didn't listen and Ubuntu Live read her hard drive and then later toasted it where nothing could read the drive after that. Still looking for that post. maybe he told me on the eeeuser forum or something and I am looking in the wrong place, i.e. newsgroups. :-( What usually happens in cases like this is, if you keep up your search, you'll eventually find what you've been looking for and you'll present it to the group in a grand 'A Ha!' and 'Ta Da!' moment. Next, someone will point out that it doesn't actually say what you thought it said, and therefore it hurts your case rather than helps it. And around and around we go, with the cycle starting again at the beginning. +1 Apparently you two don't know me too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. Now Philo says that Linux can't do anything to the Windows drive unless you mount it first. I told Philo I did not mount the Windows drive. Now Joe Internet Jun 24 '11 at 17:38 says: Most Linux live-cds boot into a desktop environment, so you just open the file manager and delete your files. Not all, however, automatically mount NTFS partitions. Two that I know of that do mount them are Ubuntu and Centos. http://superuser.com/questions/30166...sk-old-windows If true, that solves that problem. As I didn't mount the Windows drive, but Ubuntu did. Now Char mentioned me stating that I found an old post of mine that said restoring the Windows registry with ERUNT also fixed Windows XP after Ubuntu Live corrupted it somehow. Yes that is puzzling to me too. As one wouldn't think that Ubuntu would be messing around the Windows registry for any reason. I'm still looking for the post where that guy know told me what he thinks what went wrong was Ubuntu created a Windows swapfile to use for itself. Until I find it, I have to rely on my memory. So I have a theory that might put everything together. If Ubuntu automatically mounts NTFS like Joe Internet says. And my understanding is that Ubuntu will grab a Linux swap partition if it can find one. If it can't, then according to the post I am looking for says Ubuntu will seek out a Windows pagefile and use that one. And according to that post, if Windows doesn't have one, Ubuntu will create one there. Now if the above is true, I think I know what happened. Windows now tries to boot, finds a swapfile and the registry says no swapfile. Windows gets confused and makes changes to Windows registry and deletes the swapfile. Which results into an unbootable Windows. TO BE CONTINUED. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - OE-QuoteFix v1.19.2 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
#79
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 16:36:02 -0500, "BillW50" wrote
in article ... Apparently you two don't know me too well. On the contrary, we know you all too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. And then you follow with the most convoluted and least likely set of circumstances that I think I've ever seen. And I might add, one that could be reduced to a simple scenario that could be tested in about 2 minutes if you had half as much expertise as you claim. (I'll leave it as an exercise for the class to determine what that test would consist of.) Having already performed that test on several spare systems I have at my disposal, I can tell you that you are wrong. Not that this is a surprise, but there it is. I await your admission that you are wrong about this, but I won't hold my breath - you've never admitted you were wrong about anything of consequence in these newsgroups, and given your personality I sincerely doubt that will change now. -- Zaphod Pan-Galactic Gargle Blaster: A cocktail based on Janx Spirit. The effect of one is like having your brain smashed out by a slice of lemon wrapped round a large gold brick. |
#80
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
On 9/14/2012 7:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote:
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 16:36:02 -0500, wrote in ... Apparently you two don't know me too well. On the contrary, we know you all too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. And then you follow with the most convoluted and least likely set of circumstances that I think I've ever seen. And I might add, one that could be reduced to a simple scenario that could be tested in about 2 minutes if you had half as much expertise as you claim. (I'll leave it as an exercise for the class to determine what that test would consist of.) Having already performed that test on several spare systems I have at my disposal, I can tell you that you are wrong. Not that this is a surprise, but there it is. I await your admission that you are wrong about this, but I won't hold my breath - you've never admitted you were wrong about anything of consequence in these newsgroups, and given your personality I sincerely doubt that will change now. I am not wrong about running Ubuntu Live and it ruins Windows and makes it unbootable. That I am positive about. The exact conditions that causes this, I am not sure about. I also never seen it happen from Ubuntu Live CD yet (although Monica has). I personally have just seen it happen on a flash. Testing it in 2 minutes? Naw... I even have the very same flash card that I used for Ubuntu Live. Although it has BartPE on it now. Plus I need to back it up and then use unetbootin-windows-299.exe to image ubuntu-eee-8.04.1.iso on the exact same flash. Then run Ubuntu Live from the flash and it will toast the Windows XP install on the EeePC. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v12.0.1 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
#81
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
On Fri, 14 Sep 2012 08:01:31 -0500, "BillW50" wrote
in article ... On 9/14/2012 7:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 16:36:02 -0500, wrote in ... Apparently you two don't know me too well. On the contrary, we know you all too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. And then you follow with the most convoluted and least likely set of circumstances that I think I've ever seen. And I might add, one that could be reduced to a simple scenario that could be tested in about 2 minutes if you had half as much expertise as you claim. (I'll leave it as an exercise for the class to determine what that test would consist of.) Having already performed that test on several spare systems I have at my disposal, I can tell you that you are wrong. Not that this is a surprise, but there it is. I await your admission that you are wrong about this, but I won't hold my breath - you've never admitted you were wrong about anything of consequence in these newsgroups, and given your personality I sincerely doubt that will change now. I am not wrong about running Ubuntu Live and it ruins Windows and makes it unbootable. That I am positive about. The exact conditions that causes this, I am not sure about. I also never seen it happen from Ubuntu Live CD yet (although Monica has). I personally have just seen it happen on a flash. And so it begins - this whole thread has been about Ubuntu Live CD and now you say this? You are following true to form and have now begun changing the claim. Testing it in 2 minutes? Naw... I even have the very same flash card that I used for Ubuntu Live. Although it has BartPE on it now. Plus I need to back it up and then use unetbootin-windows-299.exe to image ubuntu-eee-8.04.1.iso on the exact same flash. Then run Ubuntu Live from the flash and it will toast the Windows XP install on the EeePC. What I said (if your reading comprehension was up to it) is that your scenario as described could be reduced to a 2 minute test. Go back, re-read what you posted, then what I posted, and maybe the light bulb will turn on... -- Zaphod Adventurer, ex-hippie, good-timer (crook? quite possibly), manic self-publicist, terrible bad at personal relationships, often thought to be completely out to lunch. |
#82
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
In ,
Zaphod Beeblebrox typed: On Fri, 14 Sep 2012 08:01:31 -0500, "BillW50" wrote in article ... On 9/14/2012 7:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 16:36:02 -0500, wrote in ... Apparently you two don't know me too well. On the contrary, we know you all too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. And then you follow with the most convoluted and least likely set of circumstances that I think I've ever seen. And I might add, one that could be reduced to a simple scenario that could be tested in about 2 minutes if you had half as much expertise as you claim. (I'll leave it as an exercise for the class to determine what that test would consist of.) Having already performed that test on several spare systems I have at my disposal, I can tell you that you are wrong. Not that this is a surprise, but there it is. I await your admission that you are wrong about this, but I won't hold my breath - you've never admitted you were wrong about anything of consequence in these newsgroups, and given your personality I sincerely doubt that will change now. I am not wrong about running Ubuntu Live and it ruins Windows and makes it unbootable. That I am positive about. The exact conditions that causes this, I am not sure about. I also never seen it happen from Ubuntu Live CD yet (although Monica has). I personally have just seen it happen on a flash. And so it begins - this whole thread has been about Ubuntu Live CD and now you say this? You are following true to form and have now begun changing the claim. Nope, I said that from the very beginning... On 9/7/2012 3:43 PM, BillW50 wrote: It happened on this very machine back in 2009, and booting up Ubuntu Live 8.10 from a SD card. This XP has the swapfile turned off because it runs from a SSD. And booting Ubuntu Live and doing absolutely nothing from it except shutting it down once it is loaded. Then booting XP back up and the background of the desktop shows up, no taskbar yet, and a window saying Windows Installer and nothing else and it stills there forever. The part that I got wrong was it wasn't Ubuntu 8.10 but rather Ubuntu eee 8.04.1. Also for a number of years I thought this happened around January 2009. Although reading posts yesterday I made on the eeeuser forum right after it happened it was actually November of 2008. Testing it in 2 minutes? Naw... I even have the very same flash card that I used for Ubuntu Live. Although it has BartPE on it now. Plus I need to back it up and then use unetbootin-windows-299.exe to image ubuntu-eee-8.04.1.iso on the exact same flash. Then run Ubuntu Live from the flash and it will toast the Windows XP install on the EeePC. What I said (if your reading comprehension was up to it) is that your scenario as described could be reduced to a 2 minute test. Go back, re-read what you posted, then what I posted, and maybe the light bulb will turn on... Believe whatever you want. You do anyway. You even believe I didn't say a flash drive when I did. And yes, it is still Ubuntu Live just like the iso copy is. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - OE-QuoteFix v1.19.2 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
#83
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
"BillW50" wrote in message
... In , Zaphod Beeblebrox typed: On Fri, 14 Sep 2012 08:01:31 -0500, "BillW50" wrote in article ... On 9/14/2012 7:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 16:36:02 -0500, wrote in ... Apparently you two don't know me too well. On the contrary, we know you all too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. And then you follow with the most convoluted and least likely set of circumstances that I think I've ever seen. And I might add, one that could be reduced to a simple scenario that could be tested in about 2 minutes if you had half as much expertise as you claim. (I'll leave it as an exercise for the class to determine what that test would consist of.) Having already performed that test on several spare systems I have at my disposal, I can tell you that you are wrong. Not that this is a surprise, but there it is. I await your admission that you are wrong about this, but I won't hold my breath - you've never admitted you were wrong about anything of consequence in these newsgroups, and given your personality I sincerely doubt that will change now. I am not wrong about running Ubuntu Live and it ruins Windows and makes it unbootable. That I am positive about. The exact conditions that causes this, I am not sure about. I also never seen it happen from Ubuntu Live CD yet (although Monica has). I personally have just seen it happen on a flash. And so it begins - this whole thread has been about Ubuntu Live CD and now you say this? You are following true to form and have now begun changing the claim. Nope, I said that from the very beginning... On 9/7/2012 3:43 PM, BillW50 wrote: It happened on this very machine back in 2009, and booting up Ubuntu Live 8.10 from a SD card. This XP has the swapfile turned off because it runs from a SSD. And booting Ubuntu Live and doing absolutely nothing from it except shutting it down once it is loaded. Then booting XP back up and the background of the desktop shows up, no taskbar yet, and a window saying Windows Installer and nothing else and it stills there forever. The part that I got wrong was it wasn't Ubuntu 8.10 but rather Ubuntu eee 8.04.1. Also for a number of years I thought this happened around January 2009. Although reading posts yesterday I made on the eeeuser forum right after it happened it was actually November of 2008. Testing it in 2 minutes? Naw... I even have the very same flash card that I used for Ubuntu Live. Although it has BartPE on it now. Plus I need to back it up and then use unetbootin-windows-299.exe to image ubuntu-eee-8.04.1.iso on the exact same flash. Then run Ubuntu Live from the flash and it will toast the Windows XP install on the EeePC. What I said (if your reading comprehension was up to it) is that your scenario as described could be reduced to a 2 minute test. Go back, re-read what you posted, then what I posted, and maybe the light bulb will turn on... Believe whatever you want. You do anyway. You even believe I didn't say a flash drive when I did. And yes, it is still Ubuntu Live just like the iso copy is. Whether booting it froma CD or from USB stick, it is the exact same image from the ISO, so the clarification that you used a memory card to boot instead of a CD should not matter at all. I don't see the relevance of it. -- Glen Ventura MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 CompTIA A+ |
#84
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
"BillW50" wrote in message
... In , Zaphod Beeblebrox typed: On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 12:29:52 -0500, "Char Jackson" wrote in article ... On Thu, 13 Sep 2012 11:06:53 -0500, "BillW50" wrote: In , glee typed: "Achilles" wrote in message ... On 09/12/2012 07:41 AM, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote: Live Cds for Ubuntu and Mint will automatically use a swap partition if they see a linux swap partition on the local disk. No harm could ever come from this. Yes, already mentioned.... but that is not the Windows page file, which is what BillW50 *claims* a Linux Live CD uses. Actually I am just the messenger. I am still looking for that post that someone told me what Linux can do to a Windows install (including using the Windows swapfile). I thought it was back in 2009 on a newsgroup after I told my horror story with Ubuntu Live. I did find another post on the Dell newsgroup back in August of 2011 which I totally forgotten about. As Monica's Windows started failing to boot. Somebody mentioned to use Ubuntu Live to pull off her important files off of the drive. I warned Monica not to use Ubuntu, as Ubuntu Live burned me with a Windows drive before. She didn't listen and Ubuntu Live read her hard drive and then later toasted it where nothing could read the drive after that. Still looking for that post. maybe he told me on the eeeuser forum or something and I am looking in the wrong place, i.e. newsgroups. :-( What usually happens in cases like this is, if you keep up your search, you'll eventually find what you've been looking for and you'll present it to the group in a grand 'A Ha!' and 'Ta Da!' moment. Next, someone will point out that it doesn't actually say what you thought it said, and therefore it hurts your case rather than helps it. And around and around we go, with the cycle starting again at the beginning. +1 Apparently you two don't know me too well. As I am more interested in the truth and I could careless if I was wrong about something. Nor am I afraid to admit that I do make mistakes from time to time. Now Philo says that Linux can't do anything to the Windows drive unless you mount it first. I told Philo I did not mount the Windows drive. Now Joe Internet Jun 24 '11 at 17:38 says: Most Linux live-cds boot into a desktop environment, so you just open the file manager and delete your files. Not all, however, automatically mount NTFS partitions. Two that I know of that do mount them are Ubuntu and Centos. http://superuser.com/questions/30166...sk-old-windows If true, that solves that problem. As I didn't mount the Windows drive, but Ubuntu did. Now Char mentioned me stating that I found an old post of mine that said restoring the Windows registry with ERUNT also fixed Windows XP after Ubuntu Live corrupted it somehow. Yes that is puzzling to me too. As one wouldn't think that Ubuntu would be messing around the Windows registry for any reason. I'm still looking for the post where that guy know told me what he thinks what went wrong was Ubuntu created a Windows swapfile to use for itself. Until I find it, I have to rely on my memory. So I have a theory that might put everything together. If Ubuntu automatically mounts NTFS like Joe Internet says. And my understanding is that Ubuntu will grab a Linux swap partition if it can find one. If it can't, then according to the post I am looking for says Ubuntu will seek out a Windows pagefile and use that one. And according to that post, if Windows doesn't have one, Ubuntu will create one there. Now if the above is true, I think I know what happened. Windows now tries to boot, finds a swapfile and the registry says no swapfile. Windows gets confused and makes changes to Windows registry and deletes the swapfile. Which results into an unbootable Windows. "Joe Internet" either is incorrect or has been very unclear.... Ubuntu and Centos Live CD's don't automatically mount, and don't automatically write to, the Windows partition. There are references explaining that all over if you do an in-depth search. There were many examples in Ubuntu forums and in Ubuntu's informational pages. I can only surmise that "Joe Internet" is misusing, or you are misusing, the term "mount". The drive is listed in Places on the Ubuntu menu, but it is not mounted, and made available for reads or writes, until you double-click it there, specifically making it available. This says it as clearly as can be: Mounting Windows Partitions in Ubuntu http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/mountwindows As for CentOS... no, it does not automatically mount the Windows partitions either. https://www.centos.org/modules/newbb...topic_id=34892 In fact, even installing a Linux distro to the hard drive does not mean it will automatically mount an already-existing Windows partition: How To Mount Partitions Automatically On Startup In Linux http://www.webupd8.org/2011/11/how-t...matically.html Also, there is a big difference between "mounting" a partition and actually using it for storage or for a swap file. Linux Live CDs will not create a swap file on the hard drive unless a specific parameter is added during boot.... they won't use the OS-specific Windows page file, which is not usable by Linux. They certainly won't create a Windows page file for use as a Linux swap file, that's just a preposterous idea.... Linux does not make a Windows page file. Slax, for example, will only make a swap file (it's own, NOT a Windows page file, which Linux cannot use) if a specific parameter is added by the user at boot: fileswap http://static.raymond.cc/images/slax-login.png -- Glen Ventura MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 CompTIA A+ |
#85
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
On 09/14/2012 11:21 AM, glee wrote:
"BillW50" wrote in message ... "Joe Internet" either is incorrect or has been very unclear.... Ubuntu and Centos Live CD's don't automatically mount, and don't automatically write to, the Windows partition. There are references explaining that all over if you do an in-depth search. There were many examples in Ubuntu forums and in Ubuntu's informational pages. I can only surmise that "Joe Internet" is misusing, or you are misusing, the term "mount". The drive is listed in Places on the Ubuntu menu, but it is not mounted, and made available for reads or writes, until you double-click it there, specifically making it available. Well I used Ubuntu Live on a Windows machine only just briefly back in 2008 when the mishap occurred. Then until just recently tried it again. So I don't have much experience what it normally does or not yet. This says it as clearly as can be: Mounting Windows Partitions in Ubuntu http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/mountwindows As for CentOS... no, it does not automatically mount the Windows partitions either. https://www.centos.org/modules/newbb...topic_id=34892 In fact, even installing a Linux distro to the hard drive does not mean it will automatically mount an already-existing Windows partition: How To Mount Partitions Automatically On Startup In Linux http://www.webupd8.org/2011/11/how-t...matically.html Ok I am with ya. Also, there is a big difference between "mounting" a partition and actually using it for storage or for a swap file. Linux Live CDs will not create a swap file on the hard drive unless a specific parameter is added during boot.... they won't use the OS-specific Windows page file, which is not usable by Linux. They certainly won't create a Windows page file for use as a Linux swap file, that's just a preposterous idea.... Linux does not make a Windows page file. Whoa! I found lots of URLs yesterday telling you how to use the Windows swapfile under Linux. Although I couldn't find anybody recommend it. Since it takes a performance hit when doing so. They seem to suggest it is most useful when you don't have the disk space for a Linux swap partition. I even found the opposite is true. That Windows can use a Linux swap partition with a special driver. Although I also hear tell it also contains bugs. Although what I was looking for was if Linux could automatically use the Windows swapfile. And I couldn't find anybody saying that so far. Slax, for example, will only make a swap file (it's own, NOT a Windows page file, which Linux cannot use) if a specific parameter is added by the user at boot: fileswap http://static.raymond.cc/images/slax-login.png How does Linux run in a Windows partition? What does WUBI use for swap? http://www.howtoforge.com/wubi_ubuntu_on_windows -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Ubuntu 12.04.1 Centrino Core Duo T2300 1.66GHz - 1GB - Thunderbird v15 |
#86
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Undeletable file. I'm stumped.
replies inline...
"BillW50" wrote in message ... On 09/14/2012 11:21 AM, glee wrote: "BillW50" wrote in message ... "Joe Internet" either is incorrect or has been very unclear.... Ubuntu and Centos Live CD's don't automatically mount, and don't automatically write to, the Windows partition. There are references explaining that all over if you do an in-depth search. There were many examples in Ubuntu forums and in Ubuntu's informational pages. I can only surmise that "Joe Internet" is misusing, or you are misusing, the term "mount". The drive is listed in Places on the Ubuntu menu, but it is not mounted, and made available for reads or writes, until you double-click it there, specifically making it available. Well I used Ubuntu Live on a Windows machine only just briefly back in 2008 when the mishap occurred. Then until just recently tried it again. So I don't have much experience what it normally does or not yet. This says it as clearly as can be: Mounting Windows Partitions in Ubuntu http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/mountwindows As for CentOS... no, it does not automatically mount the Windows partitions either. https://www.centos.org/modules/newbb...topic_id=34892 In fact, even installing a Linux distro to the hard drive does not mean it will automatically mount an already-existing Windows partition: How To Mount Partitions Automatically On Startup In Linux http://www.webupd8.org/2011/11/how-t...matically.html Ok I am with ya. Also, there is a big difference between "mounting" a partition and actually using it for storage or for a swap file. Linux Live CDs will not create a swap file on the hard drive unless a specific parameter is added during boot.... they won't use the OS-specific Windows page file, which is not usable by Linux. They certainly won't create a Windows page file for use as a Linux swap file, that's just a preposterous idea.... Linux does not make a Windows page file. Whoa! I found lots of URLs yesterday telling you how to use the Windows swapfile under Linux. Although I couldn't find anybody recommend it. Since it takes a performance hit when doing so. They seem to suggest it is most useful when you don't have the disk space for a Linux swap partition. I even found the opposite is true. That Windows can use a Linux swap partition with a special driver. Although I also hear tell it also contains bugs. Although what I was looking for was if Linux could automatically use the Windows swapfile. And I couldn't find anybody saying that so far. I've seen a few mentions of it, but it requires a lot of tweaking plus a series of parameters at every startup to work, is not "supported", and definitely is not done by any distributions of Linux. It's something that's been played with by some users, but you won't find it as even an alternative on a Live CD as far as I know. Going the other way... Windows using the Linux swap space... calls for a third-party driver, so again it is not a normally available feature. Slax, for example, will only make a swap file (it's own, NOT a Windows page file, which Linux cannot use) if a specific parameter is added by the user at boot: fileswap http://static.raymond.cc/images/slax-login.png How does Linux run in a Windows partition? What does WUBI use for swap? http://www.howtoforge.com/wubi_ubuntu_on_windows Wubi is a whole different animal, it isn't relevant to the Live CD discussion. It install Ubuntu to a FILE rather than a partition. It uses a loop device, a file containing (or appearing to contain) a file system, so that Linux can mount and install to the file as if it were a disk. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loop_device -- Glen Ventura MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 CompTIA A+ |
#87
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Sharing pagefile.sys with Linux and Windows [ Undeletable file.I'm stumped.]
On 9/14/2012 4:06 PM, glee wrote:
replies inline... "BillW50" wrote in message ... [snip] Whoa! I found lots of URLs yesterday telling you how to use the Windows swapfile under Linux. Although I couldn't find anybody recommend it. Since it takes a performance hit when doing so. They seem to suggest it is most useful when you don't have the disk space for a Linux swap partition... I've seen a few mentions of it, but it requires a lot of tweaking plus a series of parameters at every startup to work, is not "supported", and definitely is not done by any distributions of Linux. It's something that's been played with by some users, but you won't find it as even an alternative on a Live CD as far as I know. [snip] Naw... it is very easy to do even permanently. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swapon /mnt/data/pagefile.sys Now permanently... you need an entry in your /etc/fstab file that looks like this: ... /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swap swap defaults 0 0 ... You're done! Sharing a swap file with linux and windows http://www.linuxquestions.org/questi...indows-109511/ -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v12.0.1 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
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Sharing pagefile.sys with Linux and Windows [ Undeletable file. I'm stumped.]
"BillW50" wrote in message
... On 9/14/2012 4:06 PM, glee wrote: replies inline... "BillW50" wrote in message ... [snip] Whoa! I found lots of URLs yesterday telling you how to use the Windows swapfile under Linux. Although I couldn't find anybody recommend it. Since it takes a performance hit when doing so. They seem to suggest it is most useful when you don't have the disk space for a Linux swap partition... I've seen a few mentions of it, but it requires a lot of tweaking plus a series of parameters at every startup to work, is not "supported", and definitely is not done by any distributions of Linux. It's something that's been played with by some users, but you won't find it as even an alternative on a Live CD as far as I know. [snip] Naw... it is very easy to do even permanently. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swapon /mnt/data/pagefile.sys Now permanently... you need an entry in your /etc/fstab file that looks like this: .. /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swap swap defaults 0 0 .. You're done! Sharing a swap file with linux and windows http://www.linuxquestions.org/questi...indows-109511/ Yes...that's the series of parameters that have to be added so they run at every boot, as I stated. Matters not as far as a Live CD goes.... no standard Live CD is going to come this way... and it's Live CDs that we're talking about. -- Glen Ventura MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 CompTIA A+ |
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Sharing pagefile.sys with Linux and Windows [ Undeletablefile. I'm stumped.]
On 9/14/2012 6:00 PM, glee wrote:
"BillW50" wrote in message ... On 9/14/2012 4:06 PM, glee wrote: replies inline... "BillW50" wrote in message ... [snip] Whoa! I found lots of URLs yesterday telling you how to use the Windows swapfile under Linux. Although I couldn't find anybody recommend it. Since it takes a performance hit when doing so. They seem to suggest it is most useful when you don't have the disk space for a Linux swap partition... I've seen a few mentions of it, but it requires a lot of tweaking plus a series of parameters at every startup to work, is not "supported", and definitely is not done by any distributions of Linux. It's something that's been played with by some users, but you won't find it as even an alternative on a Live CD as far as I know. [snip] Naw... it is very easy to do even permanently. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swapon /mnt/data/pagefile.sys Now permanently... you need an entry in your /etc/fstab file that looks like this: .. /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swap swap defaults 0 0 .. You're done! Sharing a swap file with linux and windows http://www.linuxquestions.org/questi...indows-109511/ Yes...that's the series of parameters that have to be added so they run at every boot, as I stated. Matters not as far as a Live CD goes.... no standard Live CD is going to come this way... and it's Live CDs that we're talking about. That isn't how I understand it. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys [makes or adjusts pagefile.sys for Linux use] swapon /mnt/data/pagefile.sys [sets pagefile.sys as swapfile] If the two above has no problems you are good to modify the fstab file. /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swap swap defaults 0 0 Now it is permanent. Now you boot up and it automatically uses the Windows swapfile. Works for live versions too. If Windows actually uses it too, you need to add this in your /etc/rc.sysinit file so Linux can adjust it for Linux. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys Now you simply bootup and the Windows swapfile will be used by Linux with every boot. No series of parameters to add or anything. -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v12.0.1 Centrino Core2 Duo T5600 1.83GHz - 4GB - Windows XP SP2 |
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Sharing pagefile.sys with Linux and Windows [ Undeletable file. I'm stumped.]
"BillW50" wrote in message
... On 9/14/2012 6:00 PM, glee wrote: "BillW50" wrote in message ... On 9/14/2012 4:06 PM, glee wrote: replies inline... "BillW50" wrote in message ... [snip] Whoa! I found lots of URLs yesterday telling you how to use the Windows swapfile under Linux. Although I couldn't find anybody recommend it. Since it takes a performance hit when doing so. They seem to suggest it is most useful when you don't have the disk space for a Linux swap partition... I've seen a few mentions of it, but it requires a lot of tweaking plus a series of parameters at every startup to work, is not "supported", and definitely is not done by any distributions of Linux. It's something that's been played with by some users, but you won't find it as even an alternative on a Live CD as far as I know. [snip] Naw... it is very easy to do even permanently. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swapon /mnt/data/pagefile.sys Now permanently... you need an entry in your /etc/fstab file that looks like this: .. /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swap swap defaults 0 0 .. You're done! Sharing a swap file with linux and windows http://www.linuxquestions.org/questi...indows-109511/ Yes...that's the series of parameters that have to be added so they run at every boot, as I stated. Matters not as far as a Live CD goes.... no standard Live CD is going to come this way... and it's Live CDs that we're talking about. That isn't how I understand it. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys [makes or adjusts pagefile.sys for Linux use] swapon /mnt/data/pagefile.sys [sets pagefile.sys as swapfile] If the two above has no problems you are good to modify the fstab file. /mnt/data/pagefile.sys swap swap defaults 0 0 Now it is permanent. Now you boot up and it automatically uses the Windows swapfile. Works for live versions too. If Windows actually uses it too, you need to add this in your /etc/rc.sysinit file so Linux can adjust it for Linux. mkswap /mnt/data/pagefile.sys Now you simply bootup and the Windows swapfile will be used by Linux with every boot. No series of parameters to add or anything. I'm stating the same thing. By adding them to fstab, they are making the change at every boot.... they run at every boot. It isn't something that is built into any Live CD, which is the original point of this discussion. -- Glen Ventura MS MVP Oct. 2002 - Sept. 2009 CompTIA A+ |
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