UbuntuHelp:PartitioningSchemes
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目录
Partition design
Three primary partitions and one extended partition are allowed on most consumer-level hard drives. The extended partition can then be divided into a very large number of logical partitions. Each Windows installation will need to be installed on a primary partition. All the Linux (including Ubuntu/Kubuntu) installations, can (and should) exist in logical partitions, though, so you can have as many as you want. The swap partition, also, can (and should) live on a logical partition.
Use Gparted
The easiest way to do this is to use the GParted Live CD as a partition manager.
Partitioning Scheme
- At the minimum you will need:
- one primary partition for each Windows OS
- an extra small primary partition (which can be resized later, in case I need it). If there is a Windows recovery partition already installed, I leave it alone (as my second partition).
- one primary partition for the small boot partition (for storing a set of GRUB files)
- an extended partition for the Linux OSs (must be the last partition on the hard drive)
Example Partitioning Scheme
- In general I make:
- my Windows partition 20 - 30 Gb -- filesystem type NTFS (or can even be FAT32) and with the boot flag checked
- my "extra" partition 2 Gb -- which I tend to format as filesystem FAT32 (but can be anything, including ext3). If this is a Windows recovery partition, I leave it unchanged.
- my GRUB boot partition 50 - 100 Mb -- formatted to filesystem type ext3
- the extended partition is the remainder
- (At the end of the hard drive I usually leave a few Gb of free space (to allow for extra logical partition needs that I have not foreseen). This can't be done unless the extended partition is the last partition.)
- I then divide the extended partition into logical partitions:
- a /swap logical partition that is 2 Gb -- filesystem type linux-swap
- a logical partition for the / (root) folder of each planned OS (at least 10 Gb each, but 20-50 Gb is better) -- formatted as ext3 (or ext4 if you are planning to use a newer Linux OS)
- a logical partition for each specific use, such as for a groupware partition (like Kolab, for example). I make this about 20 Gb and format it as ext3, since most specific uses (like Kolab) will be comfortable with ext3. Anther example is creating a partition for the /home directory.
Other resources
- This page was adapted from Ubuntuguide -- Multiple OS Installation.
- Psychocats Guide to Partitioning