Dual Boot Ubuntu Windows 7

Step 1, Back up first, if desired. If you have any important files that you want to make sure do not get deleted, get a hold of some external storage like an external hard drive and copy all of those files over to the external hard drive.Step 2, Turn off Fast Boot. Open Control Panel (Windows + X - Control Panel from the desktop in Windows 8+). Navigate to Power Options. Click 'Choose what the power button does'. Click 'Change settings that are currently unavailable'. Make sure the box that. Steps To Dual boot Linux And Windows 7,8 or 10 are: Step 1. Download the ISO file for any of the Linux distributions. Download Rufus on your Windows PC. Now plug-in a USB flash drive with 8GB or 16GB storage and use the Rufus tool. Once the drive has been optimised.

/boot 128MB
/ 10G
/home 5G
swap =RAM
I usually put the '/home', '/' and 'swap' in a LVM volume group leaving the remainder of the disk free, so that i can add space to any filesystem which might need it later.
'/' only contains system files and usually 10G is sufficient. Most of my installations take initially about 2GB, which will grow later as updates run in, but 10G should work for some time.
'/boot' only holds the kernel image and some GRUB-configuration files. 128M will be all you ever need. Habitually i put this partition at the beginning of my disks, because many years ago Linux was not able to boot from a disk cylinder >=1024. These times are long gone, but habits die hard. It needs to be on a separate partition because Linux cannot boot from an LVM partition.
'swap' equal the size of your RAM is a good starting point. If the usage pattern of your system is not completely far out of the normal average it will be OK. Once your system starts paging heavily on a regular basis you should consider upgrading your RAM anyway.
Active5 years, 4 months ago

I'm planning on dual booting Windows 7 and Ubuntu on one of my old computers, when I was looking at disk management I have this:

My question is, if I install Ubuntu on the D: drive, will it work properly or would I get errors? I haven't done a dual boot in years and never had something like this before. Thanks for the answers in advance.

Moses
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Matthew BrzezinskiMatthew Brzezinski

2 Answers

I don't think that you are going to have problems with that partition scheme.Just remember that your data stored there will be deleted, so do a backup.Also, during Ubuntu installation, you can format that partition in Ext4 instead of NTFS, which is better for linux use, and add another small partition to use as swap.

Dual Boot Ubuntu Windows 7WindowsSekhemtySekhemty
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It should work out fine. Key word being 'should', Linux is incredibly finicky at times.

Dual boot ubuntu windows 7

I've done dual-boot situations similar to yours and the install went off without a hitch. The drivers, on the other hand, were a completely different story.

Kevin DongKevin Dong

Dual Boot Ubuntu Windows 7 Separate Hard Drive

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