Is there any good or specific reason for keeping the 2 on the same
partition?
Well I do want to avoid shifting data around, and avoid having a set how
much space each distro can use. I will probably ditch gentoo eventually, but
for now I don't want to do too much shuffling (and have too much downtime).
It just seems like something that under linux (with all its flexibility)
should be easy!
nbags.
On 12/4/06, Jeffrey 'jf' Lim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
oh hey wait, i'm sorry - i just reread that again, and realized that u
were talking about the 2 distros being on the same partition. My
apologies...
Having said that though, u could always split them out into different
partitions, but still mount them the same way ('/', '/arch'). Is there
any good or specific reason for keeping the 2 on the same partition?
-jf
On 12/4/06, Jeffrey 'jf' Lim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> what about changing the 'root=' parameter in ur menu.lst? Shouldnt
> that work? And i think if u need to refer to the /arch partition to
> get ur vmlinux26, u can use a "(hd0,0) style" of reference to get to
> ur '/arch' partition. man grub for more details.
>
> -jf
>
--
"It's so hard to write a graphics driver that open-sourcing it would not
help."
-- Andrew Fear, Software Product Manager, NVIDIA Corporation
http://kerneltrap.org/node/7228
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