Any downside of installing Ubuntu in C drive over full format install?












6















Currently I have Windows 10 operating system. I don't want to dual boot. I want to clear the C drive and install Ubuntu in it. I want to retain data in other drives. So I found this. In this he says we can do it. I just want to know, will there be any drawbacks/performance issues of keeping other drives and accessing data in them, over full hard disk format and installing Ubuntu? Also will I be able to install software/games in other drives if I run out of space in the C drive?










share|improve this question




















  • 5





    You do understand the difference between a partition (which is dividing a drive into multiple virtual-drives, so one disk-drive can have C: and a D: in windows speak), and a directory (a folder on a file-system which is on a partition which is stored in a drive/disk). Your question seems to mix up directories & partitions.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 8:10






  • 1





    Wait let me edit properly

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:12






  • 1





    @karel will there be any performance difference ? If I format all drives make remaining space as /home over keeping previous windows drives ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:18








  • 1





    NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home

    – karel
    Jan 12 at 8:19








  • 2





    Where is your data installed?

    – Paul Benson
    Jan 12 at 8:34
















6















Currently I have Windows 10 operating system. I don't want to dual boot. I want to clear the C drive and install Ubuntu in it. I want to retain data in other drives. So I found this. In this he says we can do it. I just want to know, will there be any drawbacks/performance issues of keeping other drives and accessing data in them, over full hard disk format and installing Ubuntu? Also will I be able to install software/games in other drives if I run out of space in the C drive?










share|improve this question




















  • 5





    You do understand the difference between a partition (which is dividing a drive into multiple virtual-drives, so one disk-drive can have C: and a D: in windows speak), and a directory (a folder on a file-system which is on a partition which is stored in a drive/disk). Your question seems to mix up directories & partitions.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 8:10






  • 1





    Wait let me edit properly

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:12






  • 1





    @karel will there be any performance difference ? If I format all drives make remaining space as /home over keeping previous windows drives ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:18








  • 1





    NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home

    – karel
    Jan 12 at 8:19








  • 2





    Where is your data installed?

    – Paul Benson
    Jan 12 at 8:34














6












6








6








Currently I have Windows 10 operating system. I don't want to dual boot. I want to clear the C drive and install Ubuntu in it. I want to retain data in other drives. So I found this. In this he says we can do it. I just want to know, will there be any drawbacks/performance issues of keeping other drives and accessing data in them, over full hard disk format and installing Ubuntu? Also will I be able to install software/games in other drives if I run out of space in the C drive?










share|improve this question
















Currently I have Windows 10 operating system. I don't want to dual boot. I want to clear the C drive and install Ubuntu in it. I want to retain data in other drives. So I found this. In this he says we can do it. I just want to know, will there be any drawbacks/performance issues of keeping other drives and accessing data in them, over full hard disk format and installing Ubuntu? Also will I be able to install software/games in other drives if I run out of space in the C drive?







partitioning 18.04 system-installation windows-10






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 12 at 20:19









wjandrea

8,50742259




8,50742259










asked Jan 12 at 8:01









RedmanRedman

1336




1336








  • 5





    You do understand the difference between a partition (which is dividing a drive into multiple virtual-drives, so one disk-drive can have C: and a D: in windows speak), and a directory (a folder on a file-system which is on a partition which is stored in a drive/disk). Your question seems to mix up directories & partitions.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 8:10






  • 1





    Wait let me edit properly

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:12






  • 1





    @karel will there be any performance difference ? If I format all drives make remaining space as /home over keeping previous windows drives ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:18








  • 1





    NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home

    – karel
    Jan 12 at 8:19








  • 2





    Where is your data installed?

    – Paul Benson
    Jan 12 at 8:34














  • 5





    You do understand the difference between a partition (which is dividing a drive into multiple virtual-drives, so one disk-drive can have C: and a D: in windows speak), and a directory (a folder on a file-system which is on a partition which is stored in a drive/disk). Your question seems to mix up directories & partitions.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 8:10






  • 1





    Wait let me edit properly

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:12






  • 1





    @karel will there be any performance difference ? If I format all drives make remaining space as /home over keeping previous windows drives ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:18








  • 1





    NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home

    – karel
    Jan 12 at 8:19








  • 2





    Where is your data installed?

    – Paul Benson
    Jan 12 at 8:34








5




5





You do understand the difference between a partition (which is dividing a drive into multiple virtual-drives, so one disk-drive can have C: and a D: in windows speak), and a directory (a folder on a file-system which is on a partition which is stored in a drive/disk). Your question seems to mix up directories & partitions.

– guiverc
Jan 12 at 8:10





You do understand the difference between a partition (which is dividing a drive into multiple virtual-drives, so one disk-drive can have C: and a D: in windows speak), and a directory (a folder on a file-system which is on a partition which is stored in a drive/disk). Your question seems to mix up directories & partitions.

– guiverc
Jan 12 at 8:10




1




1





Wait let me edit properly

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:12





Wait let me edit properly

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:12




1




1





@karel will there be any performance difference ? If I format all drives make remaining space as /home over keeping previous windows drives ?

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:18







@karel will there be any performance difference ? If I format all drives make remaining space as /home over keeping previous windows drives ?

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:18






1




1





NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home

– karel
Jan 12 at 8:19







NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home

– karel
Jan 12 at 8:19






2




2





Where is your data installed?

– Paul Benson
Jan 12 at 8:34





Where is your data installed?

– Paul Benson
Jan 12 at 8:34










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















9














Starting in 17.04 new installations of Ubuntu use a swap file instead of a swap partition, so everything is installed on a single ext4 partition by default including the /home directory. This makes the most efficient use of valuable disk storage space on SSDs in situations in which Ubuntu is installed on an SSD. In situations where there are multiple hard disks or partitions there are ways listed below of making efficient use of the storage space on the other partition(s) too.




Suppose Ubuntu ran into some problem, would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install Windows/Ubuntu again?




You can reinstall Ubuntu without losing data in /home even without a separate /home partition. See the following Ubuntu documentation links.




  • Ubuntu documentation Home Folder wiki


  • Ubuntu documentation Ubuntu Reinstallation wiki




Will there be any performance difference if I format all drives and make remaining space as /home over keeping previous Windows drives?




NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home



You can use custom folders for folders in /home. Example:



 xdg-user-dirs-update --set DOWNLOAD /media/user/Downloads/


would switch from /home/$USER/Downloads/ to /media/user/Downloads/ and documents downloaded would then download to the HDD and not the SSD. The same applies for all the other directories. See ~./config/user-dirs.dirs on manually editing these settings.




What about in case I want to go back to Windows, can I retain /home data?




The Windows installer overwrites the entire partition that it is installed on, and will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux operating systems from booting. For this reason it is recommended to install Windows before installing Ubuntu in a dual boot.






share|improve this answer


























  • what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:35











  • @Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

    – sudodus
    Jan 12 at 8:39






  • 1





    @karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:47











  • That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:48













  • "The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

    – gronostaj
    Jan 12 at 19:05



















5














If you keep partitions with the NTFS file system, you can mount them from linux with read and write access, but there are downsides.




  • The linux drivers for NTFS are robust, but not as efficient as linux drivers for linux file systems or Windows drivers for Windows file systems. So things will be slower than if you create ext4 file systems and copy your data files from the NTFS file systems (maybe via a backup drive).


  • The ownership and permissions are not flexible, when managed by the linux drivers from NTFS (and FAT32 and exFAT). They are set during mounting, to be the same for all files and directories, and cannot be modified unless you remount the file system.


  • Some special features of linux cannot be managed by NTFS. You should have linux file systems for all partitions belonging to the Ubuntu system: root (/), and if you have a separate home partition (/home) etc.


  • There are no good maintenance tools for NTFS in linux, so you cannot repair it or keep it fresh, except with Windows.





But in a dual boot scenario, it can be a good idea to have a separate data partition with NTFS. It can be accessed from Ubuntu as well as from Windows.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks Your answer helped a lot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:53



















4














Preliminary remark: You can preserve your data only if they currently are on separate partitions than the one known as the C drive.



You can indeed overwrite your partition, known to Windows as the c-drive, with the Ubuntu GNU/Linux operating system, and leave the other partitions in place. There are, however, issues in maintaining ntfs partitions on a computer where MS Windows is not installed.



Windows has its own file system, ntfs. All your current partitions, therefore, are most likely formatted in the ntfs file system format. Windows also supports vfat, so it is not excluded that some of your partitions are formatted in vfat. However, vfat is an older, less robust and error-resistant file system, and has limitations, amongst others with respect to the maximum file size it can store. Ubuntu, on the other hand, has different file systems. The ext4 system is the most used and is the file system created by a default installation.



Linux can read and write ntfs partitions flawlessly, unless other operating systems (I am looking at you, Apple). Thus, from this point of view, what you want can be achieved.



There is a major caveat, however. ntfs is a proprietary file system format. The ins and outs of the file system therefore are known only by the company that created the file system. While Ubuntu and GNU/Linux operating systems in general, can work with it, and even have basic tools to check the consistency of the file system, only the Windows file system checking tools (chkdsk at the command line) are fully capable of deeply investigating and repairing the file system. For this reason, any critical ntfs partition you have should be accessible by a Windows system.



You can't easily take out an internal disk to temporarily mount it to a Windows system to check. Thus, it is strongly discouraged to keep ntfs partitions around on internal drives where no Windows system is installed.



The advice, if you move away from Windows to Ubuntu, is therefore to reformat all existing partitions to a linux filesystem, typically ext4. This will erase all data, so you should move the data to an external disk, and make sure your backup is up to date, so data can be restored after the installation of the new operating system.






share|improve this answer
























  • I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:32






  • 2





    The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

    – vanadium
    Jan 12 at 8:37













  • thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:51











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














Starting in 17.04 new installations of Ubuntu use a swap file instead of a swap partition, so everything is installed on a single ext4 partition by default including the /home directory. This makes the most efficient use of valuable disk storage space on SSDs in situations in which Ubuntu is installed on an SSD. In situations where there are multiple hard disks or partitions there are ways listed below of making efficient use of the storage space on the other partition(s) too.




Suppose Ubuntu ran into some problem, would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install Windows/Ubuntu again?




You can reinstall Ubuntu without losing data in /home even without a separate /home partition. See the following Ubuntu documentation links.




  • Ubuntu documentation Home Folder wiki


  • Ubuntu documentation Ubuntu Reinstallation wiki




Will there be any performance difference if I format all drives and make remaining space as /home over keeping previous Windows drives?




NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home



You can use custom folders for folders in /home. Example:



 xdg-user-dirs-update --set DOWNLOAD /media/user/Downloads/


would switch from /home/$USER/Downloads/ to /media/user/Downloads/ and documents downloaded would then download to the HDD and not the SSD. The same applies for all the other directories. See ~./config/user-dirs.dirs on manually editing these settings.




What about in case I want to go back to Windows, can I retain /home data?




The Windows installer overwrites the entire partition that it is installed on, and will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux operating systems from booting. For this reason it is recommended to install Windows before installing Ubuntu in a dual boot.






share|improve this answer


























  • what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:35











  • @Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

    – sudodus
    Jan 12 at 8:39






  • 1





    @karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:47











  • That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:48













  • "The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

    – gronostaj
    Jan 12 at 19:05
















9














Starting in 17.04 new installations of Ubuntu use a swap file instead of a swap partition, so everything is installed on a single ext4 partition by default including the /home directory. This makes the most efficient use of valuable disk storage space on SSDs in situations in which Ubuntu is installed on an SSD. In situations where there are multiple hard disks or partitions there are ways listed below of making efficient use of the storage space on the other partition(s) too.




Suppose Ubuntu ran into some problem, would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install Windows/Ubuntu again?




You can reinstall Ubuntu without losing data in /home even without a separate /home partition. See the following Ubuntu documentation links.




  • Ubuntu documentation Home Folder wiki


  • Ubuntu documentation Ubuntu Reinstallation wiki




Will there be any performance difference if I format all drives and make remaining space as /home over keeping previous Windows drives?




NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home



You can use custom folders for folders in /home. Example:



 xdg-user-dirs-update --set DOWNLOAD /media/user/Downloads/


would switch from /home/$USER/Downloads/ to /media/user/Downloads/ and documents downloaded would then download to the HDD and not the SSD. The same applies for all the other directories. See ~./config/user-dirs.dirs on manually editing these settings.




What about in case I want to go back to Windows, can I retain /home data?




The Windows installer overwrites the entire partition that it is installed on, and will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux operating systems from booting. For this reason it is recommended to install Windows before installing Ubuntu in a dual boot.






share|improve this answer


























  • what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:35











  • @Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

    – sudodus
    Jan 12 at 8:39






  • 1





    @karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:47











  • That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:48













  • "The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

    – gronostaj
    Jan 12 at 19:05














9












9








9







Starting in 17.04 new installations of Ubuntu use a swap file instead of a swap partition, so everything is installed on a single ext4 partition by default including the /home directory. This makes the most efficient use of valuable disk storage space on SSDs in situations in which Ubuntu is installed on an SSD. In situations where there are multiple hard disks or partitions there are ways listed below of making efficient use of the storage space on the other partition(s) too.




Suppose Ubuntu ran into some problem, would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install Windows/Ubuntu again?




You can reinstall Ubuntu without losing data in /home even without a separate /home partition. See the following Ubuntu documentation links.




  • Ubuntu documentation Home Folder wiki


  • Ubuntu documentation Ubuntu Reinstallation wiki




Will there be any performance difference if I format all drives and make remaining space as /home over keeping previous Windows drives?




NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home



You can use custom folders for folders in /home. Example:



 xdg-user-dirs-update --set DOWNLOAD /media/user/Downloads/


would switch from /home/$USER/Downloads/ to /media/user/Downloads/ and documents downloaded would then download to the HDD and not the SSD. The same applies for all the other directories. See ~./config/user-dirs.dirs on manually editing these settings.




What about in case I want to go back to Windows, can I retain /home data?




The Windows installer overwrites the entire partition that it is installed on, and will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux operating systems from booting. For this reason it is recommended to install Windows before installing Ubuntu in a dual boot.






share|improve this answer















Starting in 17.04 new installations of Ubuntu use a swap file instead of a swap partition, so everything is installed on a single ext4 partition by default including the /home directory. This makes the most efficient use of valuable disk storage space on SSDs in situations in which Ubuntu is installed on an SSD. In situations where there are multiple hard disks or partitions there are ways listed below of making efficient use of the storage space on the other partition(s) too.




Suppose Ubuntu ran into some problem, would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install Windows/Ubuntu again?




You can reinstall Ubuntu without losing data in /home even without a separate /home partition. See the following Ubuntu documentation links.




  • Ubuntu documentation Home Folder wiki


  • Ubuntu documentation Ubuntu Reinstallation wiki




Will there be any performance difference if I format all drives and make remaining space as /home over keeping previous Windows drives?




NTFS is not suitable for a home partition, because there are certain type of file system objects (character devices, named pipes, etc.) which are required for certain services but are not supported on NTFS. Quoted from: Using a folder on an ntfs partition as /home



You can use custom folders for folders in /home. Example:



 xdg-user-dirs-update --set DOWNLOAD /media/user/Downloads/


would switch from /home/$USER/Downloads/ to /media/user/Downloads/ and documents downloaded would then download to the HDD and not the SSD. The same applies for all the other directories. See ~./config/user-dirs.dirs on manually editing these settings.




What about in case I want to go back to Windows, can I retain /home data?




The Windows installer overwrites the entire partition that it is installed on, and will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux operating systems from booting. For this reason it is recommended to install Windows before installing Ubuntu in a dual boot.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 12 at 19:09

























answered Jan 12 at 8:32









karelkarel

58.1k12128146




58.1k12128146













  • what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:35











  • @Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

    – sudodus
    Jan 12 at 8:39






  • 1





    @karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:47











  • That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:48













  • "The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

    – gronostaj
    Jan 12 at 19:05



















  • what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:35











  • @Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

    – sudodus
    Jan 12 at 8:39






  • 1





    @karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:47











  • That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:48













  • "The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

    – gronostaj
    Jan 12 at 19:05

















what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:35





what about in case I want to go back to windows can I retain /home data ?

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:35













@Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

– sudodus
Jan 12 at 8:39





@Redman, If you consider going back to Windows, I suggest that you make a full backup of Windows before doing anything else. The simple case is to simply remove the current Windows drive and keep it as backup, but you can also make a backup image with Clonezilla.

– sudodus
Jan 12 at 8:39




1




1





@karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:47





@karel thanks ,Windows is having too many privacy issues so I am moving away from it, even thought I an not good with linux and its commands . I will just format every thing and make remaining space as /home and would not look at windows back again .

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:47













That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:48







That is the reason I don't even want to dual boot

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:48















"The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

– gronostaj
Jan 12 at 19:05





"The Windows installer overwrites the entire disk that it is installed on" - that's completely false. All Windows versions since 2000 make you select single partition for installation. It won't even format that partition unless you tell it to and no other partitions are modified. Installation order matters for completely different reason: GRUB will detect Windows and let you boot it, but Windows loader will overwrite GRUB on MBR systems preventing Linux from booting.

– gronostaj
Jan 12 at 19:05













5














If you keep partitions with the NTFS file system, you can mount them from linux with read and write access, but there are downsides.




  • The linux drivers for NTFS are robust, but not as efficient as linux drivers for linux file systems or Windows drivers for Windows file systems. So things will be slower than if you create ext4 file systems and copy your data files from the NTFS file systems (maybe via a backup drive).


  • The ownership and permissions are not flexible, when managed by the linux drivers from NTFS (and FAT32 and exFAT). They are set during mounting, to be the same for all files and directories, and cannot be modified unless you remount the file system.


  • Some special features of linux cannot be managed by NTFS. You should have linux file systems for all partitions belonging to the Ubuntu system: root (/), and if you have a separate home partition (/home) etc.


  • There are no good maintenance tools for NTFS in linux, so you cannot repair it or keep it fresh, except with Windows.





But in a dual boot scenario, it can be a good idea to have a separate data partition with NTFS. It can be accessed from Ubuntu as well as from Windows.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks Your answer helped a lot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:53
















5














If you keep partitions with the NTFS file system, you can mount them from linux with read and write access, but there are downsides.




  • The linux drivers for NTFS are robust, but not as efficient as linux drivers for linux file systems or Windows drivers for Windows file systems. So things will be slower than if you create ext4 file systems and copy your data files from the NTFS file systems (maybe via a backup drive).


  • The ownership and permissions are not flexible, when managed by the linux drivers from NTFS (and FAT32 and exFAT). They are set during mounting, to be the same for all files and directories, and cannot be modified unless you remount the file system.


  • Some special features of linux cannot be managed by NTFS. You should have linux file systems for all partitions belonging to the Ubuntu system: root (/), and if you have a separate home partition (/home) etc.


  • There are no good maintenance tools for NTFS in linux, so you cannot repair it or keep it fresh, except with Windows.





But in a dual boot scenario, it can be a good idea to have a separate data partition with NTFS. It can be accessed from Ubuntu as well as from Windows.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks Your answer helped a lot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:53














5












5








5







If you keep partitions with the NTFS file system, you can mount them from linux with read and write access, but there are downsides.




  • The linux drivers for NTFS are robust, but not as efficient as linux drivers for linux file systems or Windows drivers for Windows file systems. So things will be slower than if you create ext4 file systems and copy your data files from the NTFS file systems (maybe via a backup drive).


  • The ownership and permissions are not flexible, when managed by the linux drivers from NTFS (and FAT32 and exFAT). They are set during mounting, to be the same for all files and directories, and cannot be modified unless you remount the file system.


  • Some special features of linux cannot be managed by NTFS. You should have linux file systems for all partitions belonging to the Ubuntu system: root (/), and if you have a separate home partition (/home) etc.


  • There are no good maintenance tools for NTFS in linux, so you cannot repair it or keep it fresh, except with Windows.





But in a dual boot scenario, it can be a good idea to have a separate data partition with NTFS. It can be accessed from Ubuntu as well as from Windows.






share|improve this answer















If you keep partitions with the NTFS file system, you can mount them from linux with read and write access, but there are downsides.




  • The linux drivers for NTFS are robust, but not as efficient as linux drivers for linux file systems or Windows drivers for Windows file systems. So things will be slower than if you create ext4 file systems and copy your data files from the NTFS file systems (maybe via a backup drive).


  • The ownership and permissions are not flexible, when managed by the linux drivers from NTFS (and FAT32 and exFAT). They are set during mounting, to be the same for all files and directories, and cannot be modified unless you remount the file system.


  • Some special features of linux cannot be managed by NTFS. You should have linux file systems for all partitions belonging to the Ubuntu system: root (/), and if you have a separate home partition (/home) etc.


  • There are no good maintenance tools for NTFS in linux, so you cannot repair it or keep it fresh, except with Windows.





But in a dual boot scenario, it can be a good idea to have a separate data partition with NTFS. It can be accessed from Ubuntu as well as from Windows.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 12 at 8:46

























answered Jan 12 at 8:28









sudodussudodus

23.4k32874




23.4k32874













  • Thanks Your answer helped a lot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:53



















  • Thanks Your answer helped a lot

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:53

















Thanks Your answer helped a lot

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:53





Thanks Your answer helped a lot

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:53











4














Preliminary remark: You can preserve your data only if they currently are on separate partitions than the one known as the C drive.



You can indeed overwrite your partition, known to Windows as the c-drive, with the Ubuntu GNU/Linux operating system, and leave the other partitions in place. There are, however, issues in maintaining ntfs partitions on a computer where MS Windows is not installed.



Windows has its own file system, ntfs. All your current partitions, therefore, are most likely formatted in the ntfs file system format. Windows also supports vfat, so it is not excluded that some of your partitions are formatted in vfat. However, vfat is an older, less robust and error-resistant file system, and has limitations, amongst others with respect to the maximum file size it can store. Ubuntu, on the other hand, has different file systems. The ext4 system is the most used and is the file system created by a default installation.



Linux can read and write ntfs partitions flawlessly, unless other operating systems (I am looking at you, Apple). Thus, from this point of view, what you want can be achieved.



There is a major caveat, however. ntfs is a proprietary file system format. The ins and outs of the file system therefore are known only by the company that created the file system. While Ubuntu and GNU/Linux operating systems in general, can work with it, and even have basic tools to check the consistency of the file system, only the Windows file system checking tools (chkdsk at the command line) are fully capable of deeply investigating and repairing the file system. For this reason, any critical ntfs partition you have should be accessible by a Windows system.



You can't easily take out an internal disk to temporarily mount it to a Windows system to check. Thus, it is strongly discouraged to keep ntfs partitions around on internal drives where no Windows system is installed.



The advice, if you move away from Windows to Ubuntu, is therefore to reformat all existing partitions to a linux filesystem, typically ext4. This will erase all data, so you should move the data to an external disk, and make sure your backup is up to date, so data can be restored after the installation of the new operating system.






share|improve this answer
























  • I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:32






  • 2





    The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

    – vanadium
    Jan 12 at 8:37













  • thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:51
















4














Preliminary remark: You can preserve your data only if they currently are on separate partitions than the one known as the C drive.



You can indeed overwrite your partition, known to Windows as the c-drive, with the Ubuntu GNU/Linux operating system, and leave the other partitions in place. There are, however, issues in maintaining ntfs partitions on a computer where MS Windows is not installed.



Windows has its own file system, ntfs. All your current partitions, therefore, are most likely formatted in the ntfs file system format. Windows also supports vfat, so it is not excluded that some of your partitions are formatted in vfat. However, vfat is an older, less robust and error-resistant file system, and has limitations, amongst others with respect to the maximum file size it can store. Ubuntu, on the other hand, has different file systems. The ext4 system is the most used and is the file system created by a default installation.



Linux can read and write ntfs partitions flawlessly, unless other operating systems (I am looking at you, Apple). Thus, from this point of view, what you want can be achieved.



There is a major caveat, however. ntfs is a proprietary file system format. The ins and outs of the file system therefore are known only by the company that created the file system. While Ubuntu and GNU/Linux operating systems in general, can work with it, and even have basic tools to check the consistency of the file system, only the Windows file system checking tools (chkdsk at the command line) are fully capable of deeply investigating and repairing the file system. For this reason, any critical ntfs partition you have should be accessible by a Windows system.



You can't easily take out an internal disk to temporarily mount it to a Windows system to check. Thus, it is strongly discouraged to keep ntfs partitions around on internal drives where no Windows system is installed.



The advice, if you move away from Windows to Ubuntu, is therefore to reformat all existing partitions to a linux filesystem, typically ext4. This will erase all data, so you should move the data to an external disk, and make sure your backup is up to date, so data can be restored after the installation of the new operating system.






share|improve this answer
























  • I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:32






  • 2





    The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

    – vanadium
    Jan 12 at 8:37













  • thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:51














4












4








4







Preliminary remark: You can preserve your data only if they currently are on separate partitions than the one known as the C drive.



You can indeed overwrite your partition, known to Windows as the c-drive, with the Ubuntu GNU/Linux operating system, and leave the other partitions in place. There are, however, issues in maintaining ntfs partitions on a computer where MS Windows is not installed.



Windows has its own file system, ntfs. All your current partitions, therefore, are most likely formatted in the ntfs file system format. Windows also supports vfat, so it is not excluded that some of your partitions are formatted in vfat. However, vfat is an older, less robust and error-resistant file system, and has limitations, amongst others with respect to the maximum file size it can store. Ubuntu, on the other hand, has different file systems. The ext4 system is the most used and is the file system created by a default installation.



Linux can read and write ntfs partitions flawlessly, unless other operating systems (I am looking at you, Apple). Thus, from this point of view, what you want can be achieved.



There is a major caveat, however. ntfs is a proprietary file system format. The ins and outs of the file system therefore are known only by the company that created the file system. While Ubuntu and GNU/Linux operating systems in general, can work with it, and even have basic tools to check the consistency of the file system, only the Windows file system checking tools (chkdsk at the command line) are fully capable of deeply investigating and repairing the file system. For this reason, any critical ntfs partition you have should be accessible by a Windows system.



You can't easily take out an internal disk to temporarily mount it to a Windows system to check. Thus, it is strongly discouraged to keep ntfs partitions around on internal drives where no Windows system is installed.



The advice, if you move away from Windows to Ubuntu, is therefore to reformat all existing partitions to a linux filesystem, typically ext4. This will erase all data, so you should move the data to an external disk, and make sure your backup is up to date, so data can be restored after the installation of the new operating system.






share|improve this answer













Preliminary remark: You can preserve your data only if they currently are on separate partitions than the one known as the C drive.



You can indeed overwrite your partition, known to Windows as the c-drive, with the Ubuntu GNU/Linux operating system, and leave the other partitions in place. There are, however, issues in maintaining ntfs partitions on a computer where MS Windows is not installed.



Windows has its own file system, ntfs. All your current partitions, therefore, are most likely formatted in the ntfs file system format. Windows also supports vfat, so it is not excluded that some of your partitions are formatted in vfat. However, vfat is an older, less robust and error-resistant file system, and has limitations, amongst others with respect to the maximum file size it can store. Ubuntu, on the other hand, has different file systems. The ext4 system is the most used and is the file system created by a default installation.



Linux can read and write ntfs partitions flawlessly, unless other operating systems (I am looking at you, Apple). Thus, from this point of view, what you want can be achieved.



There is a major caveat, however. ntfs is a proprietary file system format. The ins and outs of the file system therefore are known only by the company that created the file system. While Ubuntu and GNU/Linux operating systems in general, can work with it, and even have basic tools to check the consistency of the file system, only the Windows file system checking tools (chkdsk at the command line) are fully capable of deeply investigating and repairing the file system. For this reason, any critical ntfs partition you have should be accessible by a Windows system.



You can't easily take out an internal disk to temporarily mount it to a Windows system to check. Thus, it is strongly discouraged to keep ntfs partitions around on internal drives where no Windows system is installed.



The advice, if you move away from Windows to Ubuntu, is therefore to reformat all existing partitions to a linux filesystem, typically ext4. This will erase all data, so you should move the data to an external disk, and make sure your backup is up to date, so data can be restored after the installation of the new operating system.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 12 at 8:27









vanadiumvanadium

5,44211229




5,44211229













  • I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:32






  • 2





    The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

    – vanadium
    Jan 12 at 8:37













  • thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:51



















  • I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:32






  • 2





    The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

    – vanadium
    Jan 12 at 8:37













  • thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

    – Redman
    Jan 12 at 8:51

















I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:32





I am new to ubunto so just a quick question . Suppose ubuntu ran into some problem , would I be able to retain data in /home directory if I want to install windows/ubuntu again ?

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:32




2




2





The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

– vanadium
Jan 12 at 8:37







The bottom line is: if you value data, you always should have a backup of it. At that point, the question is not anymore relevant - there is always the backup, To your specific question: the data partition can always be preserved if it is on a separate partition than the operating system.However, to make it accessible by the new OS, you will need to convert the partition again to ntfs.

– vanadium
Jan 12 at 8:37















thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:51





thanks for the help . I will now be entering into ubuntu world

– Redman
Jan 12 at 8:51


















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