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<p>How do I mount/find the /tmp/fstab_16_04.txt<br>
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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 08/02/2016 05:20 PM, Vesa-Pekka
Tapani Mikkola wrote:<br>
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<p>I got these lenovos as second hand inc. windows in both,labels
down remarkable but not any more in use of them.<br>
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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">03.08.2016, 00:08, Ralf Mardorf
kirjoitti:<br>
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<pre wrap="">On Tue, 2 Aug 2016 15:57:50 -0400, Richard Barmann wrote:
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<pre wrap=""><span class="moz-txt-citetags">></span>#3 adding the Windows XP from my CD
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<pre wrap="">Is it possible for your needs to run Windows as guest in a virtual
machine? If using any Windows, then my recommendation is to install a
64-bit Windows 7. I'm not a Windows expert, so there might be reasons
to avoid Windows 7. However, since this is a Linux mailing list, you
should ask for Windows support on a Windows forum. Perhaps you should
first install Windows and then Linux, since at least I would dislike to
help you to fix your Linux and then two days later, help you to fix it
again, because installing Windows has broken your Linux again. If you
could run Windows as guest on a Linux host, then Windows couldn't break
your Linux installs and continuing to help you right now would make
sense. But again, running Windows in a VM can not replace a "real"
Windows install. If choosing to install it as guest makes sense,
depends to your needs. An advantage would be, that you don't need to
reboot, you could run Linux and Windows at the same time.
You are running a 32-bit Ubuntu. Is your computer really not 64-bit
architecture?
If you shouldn't know, you can find out by running
sudo lshw -c cpu
Perhaps you first need to install the package lshw .
On Tue, 2 Aug 2016 10:59:52 -0400, Richard Barmann wrote:
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<pre wrap=""><span class="moz-txt-citetags">></span>I tried to run the
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<span class="moz-txt-citetags">></span>grep linux /boot/grub/grub.cfg > /tmp/grubcfg.txt
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<span class="moz-txt-citetags">></span>but did not get any action.
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<pre wrap="">You don't see any output, because the output is redirected to a text
file. we don't need grub.cfg anymore, but we need fstab from all of
your Linux installs. IIUC you have 3 Linux installs.
Run
cat /path/to/sdb7/mount/point/etc/fstab > /tmp/fstab_ubuntu_15_04.txt
cat /path/to/sdb8/mount/point/etc/fstab > /tmp/fstab_ubuntu_16_04.txt
cat /path/to/sd??/mount/point/etc/fstab > /tmp/fstab_kubuntu16_04.txt
For the Linux you booted /path/to/sd??/mount/point needs to be dropped.
You will see no output in the terminal, but in the directory /tmp,
there will be the generated files and those files add as attachment to
emails.
I suspect you can automatically mount the partitions with the default
GUI file manager of your *buntu installs, so mounting by command line
isn't required.
Regards,
Ralf
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