Aere: Interesting question, up to your usual standards . . . short answer, I certainly don't know. My last fresh install is Lu Next 18.04 and I did "manual" and the installer "found" my two swap partitions in two different drives and in Gparted it shows the swap partition with "keys" next to them . . . so, did it put some file in the partition, or since the partition was there it just used it?? Don't know? Walter would probably know the answer to that one . . . among others who work the technical ends of the distros.
F On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 10:28 AM, Aere Greenway <[email protected]> wrote: > On 05/15/2018 10:36 AM, Fritz Hudnut wrote: > >> Hmmm, well I don't know if that fits the same "multi-boot" scenario that >> I'm referring to, where the last installed system will take over the swap >> partition, leaving the other distros without a linked swap UUID . . . and >> seeming to take a lot longer to boot. In this case the last upgraded >> system should have "captured" the shared swap and should therefore boot >> "normally"?? >> > > It seems I read somewhere, that at least with Ubuntu 18.04, they were > abandoning the use of swap partitions, and instead using swap files. Does > this apply to all Ubuntu variants, or is it only for Ubuntu? > > -- > Sincerely, > Aere > >
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