With regard to home directories, I've found it most useful to have seperate /home partitions that hold all the config files and all that, and a /home2 partition, which can be shared. On this partition each user gets another directory that they own, and then they can put "big" stuff that will be the same for each distribution (like multimedia files, for instance) in their /home2 area and make a symlink from /home to there. It works for me; YMMV. -- "Brian, the man from babbleon-on" [EMAIL PROTECTED] Brian T. Schellenberger http://www.babbleon.org Support http://www.eff.org. Support decss defendents. Support http://www.programming-freedom.org. Boycott amazon.com.
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Matt Stegman
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Tom Berkley
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Brian T. Schellenberger
- RE: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Bill Shirley
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Ron Stodden
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Kirk McElhearn
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one ha... Matt Stegman
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on on... Brian T. Schellenberger
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Marcos Dione
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... John Aldrich
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Alan Shoemaker
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... M Thompson
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one ha... Ron Stodden
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Kirk McElhearn
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one hard di... Kirk McElhearn
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one ha... Brian T. Schellenberger
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one ha... Matt Stegman
- Re: [expert] Multiple Linux systems on one ha... Ron Stodden
