On Mon, Feb 15, 2016 at 6:06 PM, Howard Gibson <[email protected]> wrote:
>    Updating my desktop to Fedora_23 continues to be a challenge.
>
>    I figured out how to connect to the network.  Now, it insists on a /boot 
> partition separate from /home.  This appears to be a new feature.  I am 
> trying to upgrade, rather than re-install everything.  I don't recall how I 
> managed to do this, but my root partition is /dev/sda1.  My other partitions 
> are contained in the extended partition /dev/sda2.
>
>    Does anybody know how I can use the Fedora installer to split /dev/sda1 
> into two partitions /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda6?. I tried deleting /, and 
> creating the two new partitions, and it did not work.  Alternately, is there 
> a way to use my root partition for booting?
>
>    I have looked at my partition table using fdisk.  It looks like I can 
> delete /dev/sda1 and create the two new partitions sda1 and sda6.  
> Definitely, this destroys my current setup, and my new install had damn well 
> better work.  Partitions sda1 and sda6 will be next to each other, followed 
> by sda2.  Has anybody done this safely?
>
>    I have a Ubuntu DVD here.  When I "Try Ubuntu", I was able to make it 
> claim that my network was connected, but I was unable to ping the machine, or 
> connect the browser to http://www.google.com.  Is this how Ubuntu behaves in 
> demo mode?   The Ubuntu installer seems to over-write boot.  If I play with 
> it, I am forced to re-install something.
>
>    Fedora_20 was a dead cinch to install.  How did everything get so 
> complicated?

Its been year since I used Fedora so I'll let someone else give you
fixing details but I can tell you welcome to systemd and uefi boot - -
- the tow individually are a blast, both together well - - - - you are
just beginning to feel the joy!

It might be far easier to reinstall.

Dee
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