Re: [SLUG] dual boot

From: Mason Mullins (mason_mullins@hotmail.com)
Date: Sun Jan 22 2006 - 12:49:29 EST


You can all the mount point anything ya like, just create the directory for
it.

It can be /mnt/windows /mnt/Xp /mnt/mickeymouse /Xp
/Windows or anything else ya like

Mason

Linux: because a PC is a terrible thing to waste.

----Original Message Follows----
From: michael hast <evylrobot19@cox.net>
Reply-To: slug@nks.net
To: slug@nks.net
Subject: Re: [SLUG] dual boot
Date: Sun, 22 Jan 2006 12:44:54 -0600

Paul M Foster wrote:

>michael hast wrote:
>
>>Hey, everybody!
>>
>> Last night, I completed my first dual-boot installation! When I had
>>asked about it before, the answer has basically been, oh, it's easy.
>>Well, I'm here to tell you that the first time setting up a dual-boot
>>XP/Debian is not easy. It will be a whole lot easier next time, that's
>>for sure! This computer that I worked on all day yesterday is my
>>brother's. He needs some M$ Office stuff, but still wants Linux. So, I
>>decided to just figure out how to do it. One thing that I have noticed,
>>though, is that I cannot see one filesystem with the other one. This
>>concerns me since that was part of the point of setting it up as a
>>dual-boot is so that he could play with documents on either side of the
>>coin and still save them in the same place. How do I do this? Am I
>>destine to reinstall again, or can I simply slip another carefully
>>formatted partition in somewhere? Any and all help welcome. Thank you!
>>
>
>For the Linux box to see the Windows filesystems, you only have to mount
>them under Linux. That involves tweaking your /etc/fstab file as root. This
>would entail adding a line such as:
>
>/dev/hdb1 /mnt ntfs defaults 0 0
>
>to that file. You would obviously change the first parameter (device),
>second parameter (mount point), and third parameter (filesystem type) to
>suit your needs. Your references are man 5 fstab and man 8 mount.
>
>For your Windows box to see your Linux filesystem(s), you need Samba
>installed and configured on your Linux box. That's a bit more complicated.
>It's primarily a question of tweaking your /etc/samba/smb.conf. Since there
>are about 138,345,837,502 ways of configuring this file, I won't detail it
>here. I'd suggest a brief tutorial on Samba. Passwords are key. Since I
>have a small network (two people, five machines), I ensure unencrypted
>passwords, which involves an edit to your Windows' machine's registry. But
>others advocate against this. Your choice. Once you get this file the way
>you want it, save it in two or three places. That way, when you have to set
>up another machine to use Samba, you can use this file as a model, without
>having to remember all the arcane bits.
>
>
how do I determine what to set up the mount point as? I know that it's not
as simple as making something up--or is it? Is there a standard thing that
I need to put in there for that purpose?

--
--Michael Hast  (the evyl robot)
I'm not picking my nose.  I'm pulling things out of it.

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