On 05/21/2017 05:48 AM, Jimmy Johnson wrote: > On 05/21/2017 03:25 AM, Michael Milliman wrote: >> >> >> On 05/21/2017 05:09 AM, Jimmy Johnson wrote: >>> On 05/21/2017 12:57 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote: >>>> Le 21/05/2017 à 09:55, Jimmy Johnson a écrit : >>> >>>>> No, you should NOT have deleted the partition, now your partition >>>>> table >>>>> is messed up. >>>> >>>> Bullshit. This is just a Gnome error. >>> >>> Unless you are deleting the last partition your partition table is going >>> to be messed up. I hope you enjoy your B.S. You can workaround by using >>> UUID, but personally I do not care for a messed up partition table. >> I also call B.S. on this response. The OPs problem has absolutely >> nothing to do with the partition table or the UUIDs of the various >> partitions. If it did, the system would not have gotten to the point of >> starting GNOME. Adding, deleting and resizing partitions, using the >> appropriate tools, is relatively save in the modern era. I have, on >> many occasions over the years deleted and re-arranged the partitions on >> my system to accommodate changing needs and have had no problems >> whatsoever. > > Michael what I'm saying is if you have sda1,sda2,sda3, partitions and > you delete sda2 partition, sda3 becomes sda2 and if you make a new > partition, even in the same unused space it will become sda3. So, in the > end the drive will read sda1,sda3,sda2 and personally I can't live like > that, I have to many systems to tend too. But as it's been mentioned you > can use UUID if your fstab and that reminds me, if you delete or format > a partition the UUID will change, #blkid will give you the UUID's. I > hear your argument, but I say back-up and start over, do it right. The Debian Installer uses UUIDs in the entries in the /etc/fstab file, so changing the numbering of the partitions (/dev/sda2 vs. /dev/sda3) does not have an effect on the overall functioning of the system. You can also use partition labels in the fstab file as well, as I do frequently, as I move data from drive to drive on occasion and simply relabel the partitions to move with the data. With that, there is no need to change the fstab when I move data around.
However, the OP's post does not mention anything of this nature. The OP deleted the existing Debian partition(s) leaving the existing Windows partition(s) alone. No mention was made of the ordering of the partitions on the drive. The OP then re-installed Debian with the Debian installer, effectively starting from scratch with Debian. Everything seems to work, except GNOME is crashing on boot. There are several things that can cause this, and I have caused some of them on my system before, however the fact that this is a fresh install limits the possible causes, the most likely of them being a missing (non-free?) video driver or some such required by GNOME to run properly. The way the OP went about scrapping and re-installing the Debian system is valid and should not have caused a problem under normal circumstances. Hence the suspicion of a missing driver (again probably non-free, and likely Radeon as well...I've had similar issues with my laptop). -- 73's, WB5VQX -- The Very Quick X-ray