BLU Discuss list archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[Discuss] Converting Windows to Linux
- Subject: [Discuss] Converting Windows to Linux
- From: greg at freephile.com (Greg Rundlett (freephile))
- Date: Thu, 25 Jan 2018 11:18:56 -0500
I bought a new HP Pavillion with Windows 10 pre-loaded. I want to run (Ubuntu) Linux full time, but have the ability to use Windows 10 in a VM when necessary (rare). The HP Pavillion has 12 GB of RAM; an SSD drive (128GB), plus a 1TB disk. There is a "recovery" partition (Drive E:) on the second disk. Specifically, this is what Windows 10 Disk Management reports: *Disk0* 119.23 GB - 260 MB EFI System Partition - 118.01 GB NTFS Windows C: (Boot, Page File, Crash Dump, Primary Partition) - 980 MB Recovery Partition *Disk1* 931.51 GB - 920.01 GB NTFS Data Primary Partition - 11.5 GB NTFS OEM Partition (Recovery) I used Disk Management to shrink the 920.01 GB NTFS Primary Partition on Disk1 down to ~50GB I plan to install Linux to the SSD Drive, and then add a VM in VirtualBox that runs Windows10 (installed to the 50 GB partition on the regular HDD). I don't know whether I can use the recovery partition to install Windows into the VM? I do know that using a Windows10 install media ISO, I can do this [1], and I just made a Windows 10 DVD just for the heck of it (the machine has a DVD-RW drive). However, I find an interesting option to use "raw disk access" to run the OS from an installation in it's own partition [2]. Does anyone have experience with "raw disk access" and opinions on whether it's advisable? The Windows 10 Home Edition is already "activated" on the OEM equipment. I'm assuming that I will need to call MIcrosoft to activate it once I install it in it's new virtual environment. The license states that I can only use one instance of the software. Of course the recovery partition is not an "installation" but rather a weird 10GB folder that I might be able to use instead of an ISO. On this point, I'm not sure, since I have almost no experience using Windows or recovering it. I'd guess that it's "pre-configured" or limited in such a way as to only be usable to install Windows 10 to the primary disk. I plan to blow away this recovery partition once everything is up and running because I would rather have the Win 10 DVD in a jacket and use the 10 GB partition for additional storage. Plan 1. Download Ubuntu 17.10.1 -> burn iso to CD/DVD disk 2. insert Linux boot media 3. reboot 4. install Linux to SSD drive, choosing Ubuntu to manage the Boot Sector 5. [DONE] partition 1TB regular disk drive to give Windows 50GB (NTFS) 6. and format the rest as EXT4, ZFS <https://insights.ubuntu.com/2016/02/16/zfs-is-the-fs-for-containers-in-ubuntu-16-04/> or BTRFS 7. install VirtualBox 8. create Windows10 VM; 9. install Windows10 into the VM using a) ISO or b) raw disk access 10. add VB Guest Additions for all the VB bells and whistles 11. Test drivers (Internet, Print, Host partition R/W access) 12. Snapshot 13. Reformat Recovery partition to ZFS 14. Create nightly cron to sync "home" partition from SSD to "recovery" partition on HDD Any suggestions or gotchas that I should know about? [1] https://itsfoss.com/install-windows-10-virtualbox-linux/ [2] http://greenash.net.au/thoughts/2016/02/running-a-real-windows-install-in-virtualbox-on-linux/ Thanks, Greg Rundlett https://eQuality-Tech.com https://freephile.org
- Follow-Ups:
- [Discuss] Converting Windows to Linux
- From: betsys at gmail.com (Betsy Schwartz)
- [Discuss] Converting Windows to Linux
- Prev by Date: [Discuss] Supermicro
- Next by Date: [Discuss] Converting Windows to Linux
- Previous by thread: [Discuss] Supermicro
- Next by thread: [Discuss] Converting Windows to Linux
- Index(es):