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Solved: change primary partition

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absolutezero1287's Avatar
Senior Member with 210 posts.
 
Join Date: May 2007
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26-Feb-2008, 10:41 PM #1
Solved: change primary partition
I want to dualboot ubuntu with FreeBSD. That's no problem, make another partition, install FreeBSD on it, and that's it, right? Nope. FreeBSD must be on the primary partition, just like Windows.
Problem with that is that Ubuntu, my current OS, is on the primary partition.

What I've done:
I used Gparted and copied my ubuntu partition into a second ext3 partition. What would happen if I were to delete my Ubuntu partition?
RootbeaR's Avatar
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26-Feb-2008, 10:51 PM #2
Quote:
Originally Posted by absolutezero1287 View Post
I want to dualboot ubuntu with FreeBSD. That's no problem, make another partition, install FreeBSD on it, and that's it, right? Nope. FreeBSD must be on the primary partition, just like Windows.
Problem with that is that Ubuntu, my current OS, is on the primary partition.

What I've done:
I used Gparted and copied my ubuntu partition into a second ext3 partition. What would happen if I were to delete my Ubuntu partition?
Back-up data.

Don't delete as that will change the ordering of the partitions. (SDA6 will become SDA5 and then back again)

Format and install.

Probably have to mess with boot loader after.
I imagine you have to do that now to get the copied Ubuntu to boot.
Elvandil's Avatar
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26-Feb-2008, 11:07 PM #3
You can have more than one primary partition on the same drive so just make a second one for the new OS.
absolutezero1287's Avatar
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Join Date: May 2007
Experience: Intermediate
27-Feb-2008, 03:34 PM #4
Thanks guys for all your help. I'm gonna give it a shot, bbs!
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