Reinstalling Ubuntu with a dual boot

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I was experiencing problems with Ubuntu Desktop like missing and broken system packages, missing Unity package and other problems. So I decided that the best solution (without touching Windows files) is just to reinstall Ubuntu.



I looked everywhere and found the way but got confused as some say that I supposed to choose "Erase Ubuntu and reinstall", others say that I supposed to choose "Something else" and just select it manually while installation. I thought the first option would be better and just safer as I don’t want any of Windows files to be touched but it says that it has a bug that erases all other partitions...



  • Current Ubuntu version: 17.04 desktop 32bit


  • will be replaced with 16.04.0 desktop 32bit
    (as 32bit 17.04 version is no longer available)


What’s the safer option to choose? And if the second one is, how to make sure it’s Ubuntu partition?







share|improve this question

















  • 3




    Something Else is always the safest, if you know your partitions and it shows the Windows partition. It might not show Windows partition if hibernated, or newer Windows with fast start up. And then if Windows not seen, the erase Ubuntu will erase entire drive. Also you must always have good backups before any system change. Why 32 bit. If system has 2GB of RAM or more and not over 10 years old it probably is a 64 bit chip/system.
    – oldfred
    Jun 1 at 21:24














up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I was experiencing problems with Ubuntu Desktop like missing and broken system packages, missing Unity package and other problems. So I decided that the best solution (without touching Windows files) is just to reinstall Ubuntu.



I looked everywhere and found the way but got confused as some say that I supposed to choose "Erase Ubuntu and reinstall", others say that I supposed to choose "Something else" and just select it manually while installation. I thought the first option would be better and just safer as I don’t want any of Windows files to be touched but it says that it has a bug that erases all other partitions...



  • Current Ubuntu version: 17.04 desktop 32bit


  • will be replaced with 16.04.0 desktop 32bit
    (as 32bit 17.04 version is no longer available)


What’s the safer option to choose? And if the second one is, how to make sure it’s Ubuntu partition?







share|improve this question

















  • 3




    Something Else is always the safest, if you know your partitions and it shows the Windows partition. It might not show Windows partition if hibernated, or newer Windows with fast start up. And then if Windows not seen, the erase Ubuntu will erase entire drive. Also you must always have good backups before any system change. Why 32 bit. If system has 2GB of RAM or more and not over 10 years old it probably is a 64 bit chip/system.
    – oldfred
    Jun 1 at 21:24












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I was experiencing problems with Ubuntu Desktop like missing and broken system packages, missing Unity package and other problems. So I decided that the best solution (without touching Windows files) is just to reinstall Ubuntu.



I looked everywhere and found the way but got confused as some say that I supposed to choose "Erase Ubuntu and reinstall", others say that I supposed to choose "Something else" and just select it manually while installation. I thought the first option would be better and just safer as I don’t want any of Windows files to be touched but it says that it has a bug that erases all other partitions...



  • Current Ubuntu version: 17.04 desktop 32bit


  • will be replaced with 16.04.0 desktop 32bit
    (as 32bit 17.04 version is no longer available)


What’s the safer option to choose? And if the second one is, how to make sure it’s Ubuntu partition?







share|improve this question













I was experiencing problems with Ubuntu Desktop like missing and broken system packages, missing Unity package and other problems. So I decided that the best solution (without touching Windows files) is just to reinstall Ubuntu.



I looked everywhere and found the way but got confused as some say that I supposed to choose "Erase Ubuntu and reinstall", others say that I supposed to choose "Something else" and just select it manually while installation. I thought the first option would be better and just safer as I don’t want any of Windows files to be touched but it says that it has a bug that erases all other partitions...



  • Current Ubuntu version: 17.04 desktop 32bit


  • will be replaced with 16.04.0 desktop 32bit
    (as 32bit 17.04 version is no longer available)


What’s the safer option to choose? And if the second one is, how to make sure it’s Ubuntu partition?









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 16 at 12:04









Melebius

3,61541636




3,61541636









asked Jun 1 at 20:31









Sara joy

32




32







  • 3




    Something Else is always the safest, if you know your partitions and it shows the Windows partition. It might not show Windows partition if hibernated, or newer Windows with fast start up. And then if Windows not seen, the erase Ubuntu will erase entire drive. Also you must always have good backups before any system change. Why 32 bit. If system has 2GB of RAM or more and not over 10 years old it probably is a 64 bit chip/system.
    – oldfred
    Jun 1 at 21:24












  • 3




    Something Else is always the safest, if you know your partitions and it shows the Windows partition. It might not show Windows partition if hibernated, or newer Windows with fast start up. And then if Windows not seen, the erase Ubuntu will erase entire drive. Also you must always have good backups before any system change. Why 32 bit. If system has 2GB of RAM or more and not over 10 years old it probably is a 64 bit chip/system.
    – oldfred
    Jun 1 at 21:24







3




3




Something Else is always the safest, if you know your partitions and it shows the Windows partition. It might not show Windows partition if hibernated, or newer Windows with fast start up. And then if Windows not seen, the erase Ubuntu will erase entire drive. Also you must always have good backups before any system change. Why 32 bit. If system has 2GB of RAM or more and not over 10 years old it probably is a 64 bit chip/system.
– oldfred
Jun 1 at 21:24




Something Else is always the safest, if you know your partitions and it shows the Windows partition. It might not show Windows partition if hibernated, or newer Windows with fast start up. And then if Windows not seen, the erase Ubuntu will erase entire drive. Also you must always have good backups before any system change. Why 32 bit. If system has 2GB of RAM or more and not over 10 years old it probably is a 64 bit chip/system.
– oldfred
Jun 1 at 21:24










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote



accepted










I prefer the "something else" option, because then I know exactly what's going on.



It should be fairly straightforward:



  • Don't touch any partitions other than ext4 or swap.

  • Double click the existing 'ext4' partition that currently has Ubuntu 17.04 on it.

  • Leave the size as it is.

  • Select 'use as ext4 journaling file system'.

  • Check 'format the partition'.

  • Choose '/' as mount point from the drop-down menu.

  • Click OK.

  • Double click the swap partition to see if 'Use as swap area' is selected, if so, click OK.

  • Choose the device for bootloader installation. In a normal case, this is just your primary hard drive (i.e. /dev/sdx). It will overwrite the Windows bootloader with Grub, allowing you to select the OS to boot in Grub. If you are running a dual boot right now, this is most likely how it is configured already. If so, you can select your primary hard drive as bootloader device. If, on the other hand, you don't want to overwrite the Windows bootloader, and you want to manually add Ubuntu to the current bootloader after installation, you should select the 'ext4' Ubuntu partition (/dev/sdan) as the device for bootloader installation. (I don't recommend the latter, I've been using Grub for years in a Windows-Ubuntu dual-boot configuration and it works just fine.)

  • When clicking 'Install now', it will ask you to confirm your actions. Just make sure that you didn't accidentally select your Windows partition to be formatted.

Something Else Ubuntu Installation



Note that in my case, /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 are Windows partitions (you can tell because they are 'ntfs' partitions). /dev/sda3 is my Ubuntu partition of type 'ext4'. It will be formatted during installation, and it will be used as the root / of the file system. /dev/sda4 is the swap partition.



Note: If you installed Ubuntu 17.04 without LVM, or if you didn't upgrade from a previous version to 17.04, you probably don't have a swap partition in the list.
If that's the case, it's a good idea to create one now. When selecting the size to use for the 'ext4' partition, leave a couple of GiB for swap, then create a new partition in the free space you created, and use it as swap.
You could also use GParted to create this partition, if that's more familiar to you. The same rule applies there: don't touch any Windows partitions, and double-check everything before confirming.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    First thing to do:



    Back up your data! If anything goes wrong, you can always restore your files.



    Second important thing:



    Remember (better write it down somewhere) your username and password. To see your username use this command:



    whoami


    To avoid conflicts, you need to enter the same username and password after reinstall.



    Reinstalling



    Simple "Reinstall Ubuntu" should work just fine:



    enter image description here



    However, to control the whole process and understand exactly what you are doing - the second option ("Something else"):



    enter image description here



    You'll see partitions, something like this:



    enter image description here



    Select only the root / partition (/dev/sda6 in this example - yours will be different).



    Mount point should still be the / one:



    enter image description here



    And here we go! Do not forget to write the same username and password.






    share|improve this answer





















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      0
      down vote



      accepted










      I prefer the "something else" option, because then I know exactly what's going on.



      It should be fairly straightforward:



      • Don't touch any partitions other than ext4 or swap.

      • Double click the existing 'ext4' partition that currently has Ubuntu 17.04 on it.

      • Leave the size as it is.

      • Select 'use as ext4 journaling file system'.

      • Check 'format the partition'.

      • Choose '/' as mount point from the drop-down menu.

      • Click OK.

      • Double click the swap partition to see if 'Use as swap area' is selected, if so, click OK.

      • Choose the device for bootloader installation. In a normal case, this is just your primary hard drive (i.e. /dev/sdx). It will overwrite the Windows bootloader with Grub, allowing you to select the OS to boot in Grub. If you are running a dual boot right now, this is most likely how it is configured already. If so, you can select your primary hard drive as bootloader device. If, on the other hand, you don't want to overwrite the Windows bootloader, and you want to manually add Ubuntu to the current bootloader after installation, you should select the 'ext4' Ubuntu partition (/dev/sdan) as the device for bootloader installation. (I don't recommend the latter, I've been using Grub for years in a Windows-Ubuntu dual-boot configuration and it works just fine.)

      • When clicking 'Install now', it will ask you to confirm your actions. Just make sure that you didn't accidentally select your Windows partition to be formatted.

      Something Else Ubuntu Installation



      Note that in my case, /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 are Windows partitions (you can tell because they are 'ntfs' partitions). /dev/sda3 is my Ubuntu partition of type 'ext4'. It will be formatted during installation, and it will be used as the root / of the file system. /dev/sda4 is the swap partition.



      Note: If you installed Ubuntu 17.04 without LVM, or if you didn't upgrade from a previous version to 17.04, you probably don't have a swap partition in the list.
      If that's the case, it's a good idea to create one now. When selecting the size to use for the 'ext4' partition, leave a couple of GiB for swap, then create a new partition in the free space you created, and use it as swap.
      You could also use GParted to create this partition, if that's more familiar to you. The same rule applies there: don't touch any Windows partitions, and double-check everything before confirming.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        0
        down vote



        accepted










        I prefer the "something else" option, because then I know exactly what's going on.



        It should be fairly straightforward:



        • Don't touch any partitions other than ext4 or swap.

        • Double click the existing 'ext4' partition that currently has Ubuntu 17.04 on it.

        • Leave the size as it is.

        • Select 'use as ext4 journaling file system'.

        • Check 'format the partition'.

        • Choose '/' as mount point from the drop-down menu.

        • Click OK.

        • Double click the swap partition to see if 'Use as swap area' is selected, if so, click OK.

        • Choose the device for bootloader installation. In a normal case, this is just your primary hard drive (i.e. /dev/sdx). It will overwrite the Windows bootloader with Grub, allowing you to select the OS to boot in Grub. If you are running a dual boot right now, this is most likely how it is configured already. If so, you can select your primary hard drive as bootloader device. If, on the other hand, you don't want to overwrite the Windows bootloader, and you want to manually add Ubuntu to the current bootloader after installation, you should select the 'ext4' Ubuntu partition (/dev/sdan) as the device for bootloader installation. (I don't recommend the latter, I've been using Grub for years in a Windows-Ubuntu dual-boot configuration and it works just fine.)

        • When clicking 'Install now', it will ask you to confirm your actions. Just make sure that you didn't accidentally select your Windows partition to be formatted.

        Something Else Ubuntu Installation



        Note that in my case, /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 are Windows partitions (you can tell because they are 'ntfs' partitions). /dev/sda3 is my Ubuntu partition of type 'ext4'. It will be formatted during installation, and it will be used as the root / of the file system. /dev/sda4 is the swap partition.



        Note: If you installed Ubuntu 17.04 without LVM, or if you didn't upgrade from a previous version to 17.04, you probably don't have a swap partition in the list.
        If that's the case, it's a good idea to create one now. When selecting the size to use for the 'ext4' partition, leave a couple of GiB for swap, then create a new partition in the free space you created, and use it as swap.
        You could also use GParted to create this partition, if that's more familiar to you. The same rule applies there: don't touch any Windows partitions, and double-check everything before confirming.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          0
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          0
          down vote



          accepted






          I prefer the "something else" option, because then I know exactly what's going on.



          It should be fairly straightforward:



          • Don't touch any partitions other than ext4 or swap.

          • Double click the existing 'ext4' partition that currently has Ubuntu 17.04 on it.

          • Leave the size as it is.

          • Select 'use as ext4 journaling file system'.

          • Check 'format the partition'.

          • Choose '/' as mount point from the drop-down menu.

          • Click OK.

          • Double click the swap partition to see if 'Use as swap area' is selected, if so, click OK.

          • Choose the device for bootloader installation. In a normal case, this is just your primary hard drive (i.e. /dev/sdx). It will overwrite the Windows bootloader with Grub, allowing you to select the OS to boot in Grub. If you are running a dual boot right now, this is most likely how it is configured already. If so, you can select your primary hard drive as bootloader device. If, on the other hand, you don't want to overwrite the Windows bootloader, and you want to manually add Ubuntu to the current bootloader after installation, you should select the 'ext4' Ubuntu partition (/dev/sdan) as the device for bootloader installation. (I don't recommend the latter, I've been using Grub for years in a Windows-Ubuntu dual-boot configuration and it works just fine.)

          • When clicking 'Install now', it will ask you to confirm your actions. Just make sure that you didn't accidentally select your Windows partition to be formatted.

          Something Else Ubuntu Installation



          Note that in my case, /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 are Windows partitions (you can tell because they are 'ntfs' partitions). /dev/sda3 is my Ubuntu partition of type 'ext4'. It will be formatted during installation, and it will be used as the root / of the file system. /dev/sda4 is the swap partition.



          Note: If you installed Ubuntu 17.04 without LVM, or if you didn't upgrade from a previous version to 17.04, you probably don't have a swap partition in the list.
          If that's the case, it's a good idea to create one now. When selecting the size to use for the 'ext4' partition, leave a couple of GiB for swap, then create a new partition in the free space you created, and use it as swap.
          You could also use GParted to create this partition, if that's more familiar to you. The same rule applies there: don't touch any Windows partitions, and double-check everything before confirming.






          share|improve this answer













          I prefer the "something else" option, because then I know exactly what's going on.



          It should be fairly straightforward:



          • Don't touch any partitions other than ext4 or swap.

          • Double click the existing 'ext4' partition that currently has Ubuntu 17.04 on it.

          • Leave the size as it is.

          • Select 'use as ext4 journaling file system'.

          • Check 'format the partition'.

          • Choose '/' as mount point from the drop-down menu.

          • Click OK.

          • Double click the swap partition to see if 'Use as swap area' is selected, if so, click OK.

          • Choose the device for bootloader installation. In a normal case, this is just your primary hard drive (i.e. /dev/sdx). It will overwrite the Windows bootloader with Grub, allowing you to select the OS to boot in Grub. If you are running a dual boot right now, this is most likely how it is configured already. If so, you can select your primary hard drive as bootloader device. If, on the other hand, you don't want to overwrite the Windows bootloader, and you want to manually add Ubuntu to the current bootloader after installation, you should select the 'ext4' Ubuntu partition (/dev/sdan) as the device for bootloader installation. (I don't recommend the latter, I've been using Grub for years in a Windows-Ubuntu dual-boot configuration and it works just fine.)

          • When clicking 'Install now', it will ask you to confirm your actions. Just make sure that you didn't accidentally select your Windows partition to be formatted.

          Something Else Ubuntu Installation



          Note that in my case, /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 are Windows partitions (you can tell because they are 'ntfs' partitions). /dev/sda3 is my Ubuntu partition of type 'ext4'. It will be formatted during installation, and it will be used as the root / of the file system. /dev/sda4 is the swap partition.



          Note: If you installed Ubuntu 17.04 without LVM, or if you didn't upgrade from a previous version to 17.04, you probably don't have a swap partition in the list.
          If that's the case, it's a good idea to create one now. When selecting the size to use for the 'ext4' partition, leave a couple of GiB for swap, then create a new partition in the free space you created, and use it as swap.
          You could also use GParted to create this partition, if that's more familiar to you. The same rule applies there: don't touch any Windows partitions, and double-check everything before confirming.







          share|improve this answer













          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer











          answered Jun 1 at 21:23









          tttapa

          1386




          1386






















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              First thing to do:



              Back up your data! If anything goes wrong, you can always restore your files.



              Second important thing:



              Remember (better write it down somewhere) your username and password. To see your username use this command:



              whoami


              To avoid conflicts, you need to enter the same username and password after reinstall.



              Reinstalling



              Simple "Reinstall Ubuntu" should work just fine:



              enter image description here



              However, to control the whole process and understand exactly what you are doing - the second option ("Something else"):



              enter image description here



              You'll see partitions, something like this:



              enter image description here



              Select only the root / partition (/dev/sda6 in this example - yours will be different).



              Mount point should still be the / one:



              enter image description here



              And here we go! Do not forget to write the same username and password.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                0
                down vote













                First thing to do:



                Back up your data! If anything goes wrong, you can always restore your files.



                Second important thing:



                Remember (better write it down somewhere) your username and password. To see your username use this command:



                whoami


                To avoid conflicts, you need to enter the same username and password after reinstall.



                Reinstalling



                Simple "Reinstall Ubuntu" should work just fine:



                enter image description here



                However, to control the whole process and understand exactly what you are doing - the second option ("Something else"):



                enter image description here



                You'll see partitions, something like this:



                enter image description here



                Select only the root / partition (/dev/sda6 in this example - yours will be different).



                Mount point should still be the / one:



                enter image description here



                And here we go! Do not forget to write the same username and password.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote









                  First thing to do:



                  Back up your data! If anything goes wrong, you can always restore your files.



                  Second important thing:



                  Remember (better write it down somewhere) your username and password. To see your username use this command:



                  whoami


                  To avoid conflicts, you need to enter the same username and password after reinstall.



                  Reinstalling



                  Simple "Reinstall Ubuntu" should work just fine:



                  enter image description here



                  However, to control the whole process and understand exactly what you are doing - the second option ("Something else"):



                  enter image description here



                  You'll see partitions, something like this:



                  enter image description here



                  Select only the root / partition (/dev/sda6 in this example - yours will be different).



                  Mount point should still be the / one:



                  enter image description here



                  And here we go! Do not forget to write the same username and password.






                  share|improve this answer













                  First thing to do:



                  Back up your data! If anything goes wrong, you can always restore your files.



                  Second important thing:



                  Remember (better write it down somewhere) your username and password. To see your username use this command:



                  whoami


                  To avoid conflicts, you need to enter the same username and password after reinstall.



                  Reinstalling



                  Simple "Reinstall Ubuntu" should work just fine:



                  enter image description here



                  However, to control the whole process and understand exactly what you are doing - the second option ("Something else"):



                  enter image description here



                  You'll see partitions, something like this:



                  enter image description here



                  Select only the root / partition (/dev/sda6 in this example - yours will be different).



                  Mount point should still be the / one:



                  enter image description here



                  And here we go! Do not forget to write the same username and password.







                  share|improve this answer













                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer











                  answered Jun 1 at 21:45









                  Ducky

                  563




                  563






















                       

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