Difference between revisions of "Installing OPENSUSE 10.3 on a ThinkPad T61p"

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<h1> Partitioning </h1>
 
<h1> Partitioning </h1>
OpenSUSE suggested to shrink the windows partition to 60GB which was fine. However, the linux partitions needed some changes from what was proposed as a default:
+
OpenSUSE suggested to shrink the windows partition to 60GB which was fine since I spend most of mytime in OpenSUSE. However, the linux partitions needed some changes from what was proposed as a default (everything under an extended partition) to ensure dual boot. After the windows partition, I chose:
 +
<ol>
 +
<li>A primary partition of 100MB (Ext3) as /boot (check that "set partition to active" is flagged) to install GRUB </li>
 +
<li>An extended partition for the rest:
 +
    <ol>
 +
        <li>Partition for / </li>
 +
        <li>Partition for /home </li>
 +
    </ol>
 +
</li>
 +
</ol>

Revision as of 10:32, 16 April 2008

Introduction

Experiences installing OpenSUSE 10.3 x86_64 on a T61 as a dual boot system with Windows Vista.

Partitioning

OpenSUSE suggested to shrink the windows partition to 60GB which was fine since I spend most of mytime in OpenSUSE. However, the linux partitions needed some changes from what was proposed as a default (everything under an extended partition) to ensure dual boot. After the windows partition, I chose:

  1. A primary partition of 100MB (Ext3) as /boot (check that "set partition to active" is flagged) to install GRUB
  2. An extended partition for the rest:
    1. Partition for /
    2. Partition for /home