Partition disappear after installation with wubi
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Partition disappear after installation with wubi
Hi guys. I have 3 partitions in windows - C, D, E. When I install linux mint 14 (mate 64) in E with wubi, the partition is not visible in linux. When I login in LM I can mount only C or D. Any ideas ?
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: Partition disappear after installation with wubi
WUBI does NOT create a partition. It creates a pseudo partition in the Windows NTFS file system, only. You will have to dedicate a partition to Linux by doing a full installation to have a Linux partition, and then the Linux partition will not be detected by Windows, as it will not be a Windows compatible file system. This will also mean you will probably be booting from GRUB instead of the Windows BCD boot system.
Re: Partition disappear after installation with wubi
Not a Wubi user but you may be looking in the wrong place. Try here: /hostALF13 wrote:Hi guys. I have 3 partitions in windows - C, D, E. When I install linux mint 14 (mate 64) in E with wubi, the partition is not visible in linux. When I login in LM I can mount only C or D. Any ideas ?
Please add a [SOLVED] at the end of your original subject header if your question has been answered and solved.
Re: Partition disappear after installation with wubi
I see. Can you suggest a good partition splitting software so I can install linux as it's meant to be. [it doesn't matter whether it is for linux or windows]
Oh, can you help me with this - how many gigabytes are needed for optimal usage of linux mint 64 [mate] ?
Thanks
Oh, can you help me with this - how many gigabytes are needed for optimal usage of linux mint 64 [mate] ?
Thanks
Re: Partition disappear after installation with wubi
You want to do a full install?
Boot into your Windows OS and uninstall wubi from the control panel.
Now create a bootable DVD or USB flash drive with Linux Mint in it. See http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/usb
A few notes before continuing:
-This will format the partition you are going to use for Linux Mint. (you'll lose data on this parition so backup the data)
-This partition will not be accessible/visible in Windows.
Now boot you Live Linux USB or DVD and click the Install Linux Mint icon on the desktop. On the installation screen, choose "do something else".
This will get you to the manual partitioning screen. Click the partition you want to allocate for Mint and click Change.
Set the partition size, Use as Ext4 Journaling Filesystem and mount point as /
click OK
Below you'll see the option on what device to install the bootloader, choose /dev/sda
Click again the Ext4 partition you created and check the format option.
Lastly, click Install Now. Let it do its thing and if everything worked as planned, you'll have a dual boot system.
Boot into your Windows OS and uninstall wubi from the control panel.
Now create a bootable DVD or USB flash drive with Linux Mint in it. See http://www.psychocats.net/ubuntu/usb
A few notes before continuing:
-This will format the partition you are going to use for Linux Mint. (you'll lose data on this parition so backup the data)
-This partition will not be accessible/visible in Windows.
Now boot you Live Linux USB or DVD and click the Install Linux Mint icon on the desktop. On the installation screen, choose "do something else".
This will get you to the manual partitioning screen. Click the partition you want to allocate for Mint and click Change.
Set the partition size, Use as Ext4 Journaling Filesystem and mount point as /
click OK
Below you'll see the option on what device to install the bootloader, choose /dev/sda
Click again the Ext4 partition you created and check the format option.
Lastly, click Install Now. Let it do its thing and if everything worked as planned, you'll have a dual boot system.