Feb 22
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A couple of weeks ago, I decided to shrink my windozzze partition, and give the extra space to Ubuntu. I’ve been using Linux on and off for some years now, so I have a bunch of commands and methods stored away in my memory, and as such, I remembered that I probably wouldn’t be able to repartition my drive while in Linux, and while one of the partitions (i.e. my root partition) was mounted - and, of course, if I unmounted my root partition, I wouldn’t be able to use any applications located there to execute the repartition… Minor dilema.Thankfully, Ubuntu has a LiveCD, which, as well as being the installation CD, also has the OS loaded so it can be booted and tested without even installing it on the computer! Handy, eh?

So, I booted into the LiveCD and once it had loaded, was able to run the Partition Editor (System -> Administration -> Partition Editor) application. From here, I switched the Swap off (I was also about to install 2Gb RAM, and thus wanted to shrink my Swap file from 2Gb to 1Gb), resized my Windozzze, Swap and Ubuntu root / partition, and made a cup of tea (milk, no sugar - I’m English, you see).

I finished my brew around the same time Ubuntu finished its little task of repartitioning (I like to drink my tea slowly), and rebooted the system (without the LiveCD), and everything seemed to work well - I had a larger Linux partition, a smaller Windozzze partition, and a smaller Swap file… fantastic - no errors, and no data loss! Then I started running applications - the RAM filled up, and the computer ground to a halt… So, the Swap wasn’t working after all. Bugger.

Opening /etc/fstab
more /etc/fstab
revealed that the Swap is supposed to automount at boot time, so something was obviously amiss, since the Swap clearly wasn’t mounted! I ran
mkswap /dev/hda6
(my Swap partition), and found the problem - the UUID for the partition was different, doh! Changed the UUID for /dev/hda6 in fstab
gksu gedit /etc/fstab
saved, rebooted, and all the lights came on.

Ubuntu rules!

written by Hodge \\ tags: , , , , , , ,

Feb 21
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Why 64 Bit Jungle? Well, I live in the Mountainous Jungle of Northern Thailand, near the Burmese Border, and I’ve always been interested in Computer Technology. I’m currently using an AMD 64 Bit Acer Aspire 5052 Laptop to work, and play. I’ve been meaning to set up a blog for some time now, and the name “64bitjungle” came to me during a brief period of meditation… It seemed as though my mind was trying to tell me something, even though I was trying to meditate! So I set up this blog…

Unfortunately, the blog name isn’t really future proof, so when 64 bits become 128 bits…

written by Hodge \\ tags: , , , ,

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