I'm not 100% sure but I think you should just be able to install fedora over your suse partition. Obviously you would lose suse by doing this. But when you install fedora you should be able to choose the partition to install it on. If you install it on the partition with suse on it it should over write suse with fedora and work fine.
I am 100% sure you can do exactly what is said above. This is how and why, if you plan ahead, you can mount /home on a separate partition from say, /, and then when you do a re-install of some version/distro of Linux, tell it to use that old /home partition for /home again, and tell it _not_ to format that partition. That way all your user data will survive the reinstall.
If you are really tricky you can try this with other directory trees you want to preserve from one install to another, so I've heard, such as /etc, /var, /boot, or whatever.
Bryan
>From: Dudu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Newbie Help <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: Linux questions <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [newbies] Fedora over SuSe
>Date: Tue, 24 Aug 2004 13:51:08 -0600
>
>Is there any way I can install Fedora without having to partition my hard disk again? I already have SuSe (and a Windows partition).
>Eduardo
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