Steve:

It appears that you created your Lubuntu partition as an NTFS file-system, which is why Windows can 'see' it.

In the past, it would not work to install a Linux system in an NTFS file-system (or FAT32, for that matter). It may be that has changed (I haven't tried it for probably over 10 years).

Normally, you create an EXT4 partition for current levels of Lubuntu (Ubuntu) Linux. Though in the future (16.04), it appears Ubuntu will be introducing a new file-system type.

Using a new file system type was initially a problem for me (when they introduced EXT4, where before it was EXT3), because the older system partition systems couldn't reference the new file system. If you don't have multiple Linux partitions, that shouldn't be a problem.

From my experience, I recommend you delete the "Lubuntu" partition, and re-create it as an EXT4 file-system. Install Lubuntu on that newly-created EXT4 partition (which Windows will no longer be able to see).

The GRUB boot loader is simply installed in the SDA drive (it will replace the Windows boot-loader with GRUB, which lets you choose which system to boot). You don't specify a particular partition for the GRUB boot loader - you specify the disk drive itself.

If you need a file system that all of the OS's can reference, you can use FAT32, or perhaps NTFS. However, Windows 8 & 8.1 (and perhaps also Windows 10) may not let-go of NTFS partitions when you reboot, so you may not be able to reference it from Linux. It seems to release FAT32 partitions when you reboot.

- Aere


On 03/18/2016 02:37 AM, Stephen Bradshaw wrote:

*Topic*: Unsure of which /dev/sda to select for a Lubuntu / Windows 7 side by side installation.


The only version of Lubuntu that I have hope of installing successfully is 15.10. However, there's still a problem. I partitioned my C: drive and called the new 30 GB partition "L" (for Lubuntu). But, at the final stage of installation, the available drives and partitions that Lubuntu shows are nothing like the ones Windows shows. I cannot figure out which /dev/sda partition corresponds to my Windows L partition.

The clearest way to show this is with the two attachments. I'd greatly appreciate if someone could tell me which /dev/sda is my Windows L.

(I assume that the 271.5 GB “free space” is my D: drive, although the size on Windows is 222 GB.)

Many thanks,

Steve






--
Sincerely,
Aere

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