How to set a dual-boot installation with two hard drives (SSD and HDD) The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) 2019 Community Moderator Election ResultsDual booting with two drivesDual Boot Configuration with SSD and HDDUbuntu and Windows 10 dual bootInstall Linux to SSD or HDD for virtualizing Windows with QEMU?Dual Boot System, Moving Linux Mint to SSDUnable to boot on Debian after cloning dual-boot from HDD to SSDDual Boot Dell Inspiron 7577 Windows SSD and Linux HDDHow to clone Ubuntu 18.04 LTS from HDD to SSD?Not able to build dual boot in separated hard drives

My body leaves; my core can stay

Is every episode of "Where are my Pants?" identical?

Why can't devices on different VLANs, but on the same subnet, communicate?

How to support a colleague who finds meetings extremely tiring?

Am I ethically obligated to go into work on an off day if the reason is sudden?

Why doesn't shell automatically fix "useless use of cat"?

Using dividends to reduce short term capital gains?

What do I do when my TA workload is more than expected?

Is 'stolen' appropriate word?

How many cones with angle theta can I pack into the unit sphere?

Variable with quotation marks "$()"

What other Star Trek series did the main TNG cast show up in?

Would an alien lifeform be able to achieve space travel if lacking in vision?

"is" operation returns false even though two objects have same id

Did the new image of black hole confirm the general theory of relativity?

Does Parliament hold absolute power in the UK?

How do you keep chess fun when your opponent constantly beats you?

Single author papers against my advisor's will?

Can we generate random numbers using irrational numbers like π and e?

What force causes entropy to increase?

ELI5: Why do they say that Israel would have been the fourth country to land a spacecraft on the Moon and why do they call it low cost?

One-dimensional Japanese puzzle

60's-70's movie: home appliances revolting against the owners

How to determine omitted units in a publication



How to set a dual-boot installation with two hard drives (SSD and HDD)



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
2019 Community Moderator Election ResultsDual booting with two drivesDual Boot Configuration with SSD and HDDUbuntu and Windows 10 dual bootInstall Linux to SSD or HDD for virtualizing Windows with QEMU?Dual Boot System, Moving Linux Mint to SSDUnable to boot on Debian after cloning dual-boot from HDD to SSDDual Boot Dell Inspiron 7577 Windows SSD and Linux HDDHow to clone Ubuntu 18.04 LTS from HDD to SSD?Not able to build dual boot in separated hard drives



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















I'm about to format my PC with Windows 10 and I would like to install a system with Windows 10 and Ubuntu dual-boot. I have already done that in other occasions, but this time is different.



I don't know how to set my Linux partitions correctly so what I usually do is using the automatic tool in the Ubuntu installation process. It has worked for me over the past years whenever I tried to install Linux.



This time, my PC has a SSD (120 GB) and a HDD (1 TB), currently with Windows 10. I use the former to boot the system and store the most frequently used software, and the latter to store music, photos, videos, games, etc.



My intention is to install both OS so that they both boot from the SSD and have a minimum storage in it, while using the HDD for storage in both OS.



I will be using Ubuntu for programming, so I might not need as much space in the HDD. However, I will be using Windows for PC gaming, so I'll need more space there.



I don't mind deleting all my current data, since it's already backed up online. I would even prefer to delete all, since I want to clean my current Windows installation.










share|improve this question






























    2















    I'm about to format my PC with Windows 10 and I would like to install a system with Windows 10 and Ubuntu dual-boot. I have already done that in other occasions, but this time is different.



    I don't know how to set my Linux partitions correctly so what I usually do is using the automatic tool in the Ubuntu installation process. It has worked for me over the past years whenever I tried to install Linux.



    This time, my PC has a SSD (120 GB) and a HDD (1 TB), currently with Windows 10. I use the former to boot the system and store the most frequently used software, and the latter to store music, photos, videos, games, etc.



    My intention is to install both OS so that they both boot from the SSD and have a minimum storage in it, while using the HDD for storage in both OS.



    I will be using Ubuntu for programming, so I might not need as much space in the HDD. However, I will be using Windows for PC gaming, so I'll need more space there.



    I don't mind deleting all my current data, since it's already backed up online. I would even prefer to delete all, since I want to clean my current Windows installation.










    share|improve this question


























      2












      2








      2








      I'm about to format my PC with Windows 10 and I would like to install a system with Windows 10 and Ubuntu dual-boot. I have already done that in other occasions, but this time is different.



      I don't know how to set my Linux partitions correctly so what I usually do is using the automatic tool in the Ubuntu installation process. It has worked for me over the past years whenever I tried to install Linux.



      This time, my PC has a SSD (120 GB) and a HDD (1 TB), currently with Windows 10. I use the former to boot the system and store the most frequently used software, and the latter to store music, photos, videos, games, etc.



      My intention is to install both OS so that they both boot from the SSD and have a minimum storage in it, while using the HDD for storage in both OS.



      I will be using Ubuntu for programming, so I might not need as much space in the HDD. However, I will be using Windows for PC gaming, so I'll need more space there.



      I don't mind deleting all my current data, since it's already backed up online. I would even prefer to delete all, since I want to clean my current Windows installation.










      share|improve this question
















      I'm about to format my PC with Windows 10 and I would like to install a system with Windows 10 and Ubuntu dual-boot. I have already done that in other occasions, but this time is different.



      I don't know how to set my Linux partitions correctly so what I usually do is using the automatic tool in the Ubuntu installation process. It has worked for me over the past years whenever I tried to install Linux.



      This time, my PC has a SSD (120 GB) and a HDD (1 TB), currently with Windows 10. I use the former to boot the system and store the most frequently used software, and the latter to store music, photos, videos, games, etc.



      My intention is to install both OS so that they both boot from the SSD and have a minimum storage in it, while using the HDD for storage in both OS.



      I will be using Ubuntu for programming, so I might not need as much space in the HDD. However, I will be using Windows for PC gaming, so I'll need more space there.



      I don't mind deleting all my current data, since it's already backed up online. I would even prefer to delete all, since I want to clean my current Windows installation.







      linux ubuntu windows dual-boot ssd






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Mar 9 at 15:21









      Rui F Ribeiro

      42k1483142




      42k1483142










      asked Jun 3 '17 at 10:16









      adferteadferte

      1112




      1112




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          0














          1. Install Windows normally on the SSD while leaving space for the Ubuntu installation. You can initialize the HDD here if you want.

          2. Install Ubuntu with the "Install alongside Windows" option.

          3. Make sure the BIOS' boot priority boots to the SSD before the HDD.

          Since there's already an existing installation of Windows on the drive, the Ubuntu installer will give you an option to install alongside it.



          Also, you can just install windows completely on the drive or use an existing windows install and Ubuntu can shrink the partition size, but I haven't tested this myself and usually shrink the partition from Windows.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:35












          • Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:36











          • Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:45











          • Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:49











          • A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:50












          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "106"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );













          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f368968%2fhow-to-set-a-dual-boot-installation-with-two-hard-drives-ssd-and-hdd%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          0














          1. Install Windows normally on the SSD while leaving space for the Ubuntu installation. You can initialize the HDD here if you want.

          2. Install Ubuntu with the "Install alongside Windows" option.

          3. Make sure the BIOS' boot priority boots to the SSD before the HDD.

          Since there's already an existing installation of Windows on the drive, the Ubuntu installer will give you an option to install alongside it.



          Also, you can just install windows completely on the drive or use an existing windows install and Ubuntu can shrink the partition size, but I haven't tested this myself and usually shrink the partition from Windows.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:35












          • Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:36











          • Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:45











          • Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:49











          • A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:50
















          0














          1. Install Windows normally on the SSD while leaving space for the Ubuntu installation. You can initialize the HDD here if you want.

          2. Install Ubuntu with the "Install alongside Windows" option.

          3. Make sure the BIOS' boot priority boots to the SSD before the HDD.

          Since there's already an existing installation of Windows on the drive, the Ubuntu installer will give you an option to install alongside it.



          Also, you can just install windows completely on the drive or use an existing windows install and Ubuntu can shrink the partition size, but I haven't tested this myself and usually shrink the partition from Windows.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:35












          • Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:36











          • Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:45











          • Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:49











          • A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:50














          0












          0








          0







          1. Install Windows normally on the SSD while leaving space for the Ubuntu installation. You can initialize the HDD here if you want.

          2. Install Ubuntu with the "Install alongside Windows" option.

          3. Make sure the BIOS' boot priority boots to the SSD before the HDD.

          Since there's already an existing installation of Windows on the drive, the Ubuntu installer will give you an option to install alongside it.



          Also, you can just install windows completely on the drive or use an existing windows install and Ubuntu can shrink the partition size, but I haven't tested this myself and usually shrink the partition from Windows.






          share|improve this answer















          1. Install Windows normally on the SSD while leaving space for the Ubuntu installation. You can initialize the HDD here if you want.

          2. Install Ubuntu with the "Install alongside Windows" option.

          3. Make sure the BIOS' boot priority boots to the SSD before the HDD.

          Since there's already an existing installation of Windows on the drive, the Ubuntu installer will give you an option to install alongside it.



          Also, you can just install windows completely on the drive or use an existing windows install and Ubuntu can shrink the partition size, but I haven't tested this myself and usually shrink the partition from Windows.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jun 3 '17 at 10:40

























          answered Jun 3 '17 at 10:32









          yuki_is_boredyuki_is_bored

          13




          13












          • Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:35












          • Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:36











          • Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:45











          • Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:49











          • A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:50


















          • Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:35












          • Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:36











          • Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

            – adferte
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:45











          • Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:49











          • A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

            – yuki_is_bored
            Jun 3 '17 at 10:50

















          Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

          – adferte
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:35






          Wouldn't that be installing each OS in separated disks? I want both OS to boot from SSD so that they can benefit from the booting speed that it provides, and also give both some space of the other disk for general use.

          – adferte
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:35














          Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

          – yuki_is_bored
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:36





          Ah, sorry I misread your question. I'll change the answer.

          – yuki_is_bored
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:36













          Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

          – adferte
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:45





          Thanks for the updated answer. And what would be a good set up of Linux partitions (/boot, /, /home, swap)? How many space each and in which disk?

          – adferte
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:45













          Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

          – yuki_is_bored
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:49





          Yeah, that would setup the partitions automatically, I think it maximizes the /home partition and gives ~20-30 GB for the / partition. If you want you can just use manual partitioning and create a single root partition and an optional swap partition.

          – yuki_is_bored
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:49













          A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

          – yuki_is_bored
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:50






          A basic Linux installation only requires a root partition, really. A separate partition for /home, swap partition, etc are optional. Most installs separates /home because it allows easier migration to other distributions, etc.

          – yuki_is_bored
          Jun 3 '17 at 10:50


















          draft saved

          draft discarded
















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Unix & Linux Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid


          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f368968%2fhow-to-set-a-dual-boot-installation-with-two-hard-drives-ssd-and-hdd%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          getting Checkpoint VPN SSL Network Extender working in the command lineHow to connect to CheckPoint VPN on Ubuntu 18.04LTS?Will the Linux ( red-hat ) Open VPNC Client connect to checkpoint or nortel VPN gateways?VPN client for linux machine + support checkpoint gatewayVPN SSL Network Extender in FirefoxLinux Checkpoint SNX tool configuration issuesCheck Point - Connect under Linux - snx + OTPSNX VPN Ububuntu 18.XXUsing Checkpoint VPN SSL Network Extender CLI with certificateVPN with network manager (nm-applet) is not workingWill the Linux ( red-hat ) Open VPNC Client connect to checkpoint or nortel VPN gateways?VPN client for linux machine + support checkpoint gatewayImport VPN config files to NetworkManager from command lineTrouble connecting to VPN using network-manager, while command line worksStart a VPN connection with PPTP protocol on command linestarting a docker service daemon breaks the vpn networkCan't connect to vpn with Network-managerVPN SSL Network Extender in FirefoxUsing Checkpoint VPN SSL Network Extender CLI with certificate

          Cannot Extend partition with GParted The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) 2019 Community Moderator Election ResultsCan't increase partition size with GParted?GParted doesn't recognize the unallocated space after my current partitionWhat is the best way to add unallocated space located before to Ubuntu 12.04 partition with GParted live?I can't figure out how to extend my Arch home partition into free spaceGparted Linux Mint 18.1 issueTrying to extend but swap partition is showing as Unknown in Gparted, shows proper from fdiskRearrange partitions in gparted to extend a partitionUnable to extend partition even though unallocated space is next to it using GPartedAllocate free space to root partitiongparted: how to merge unallocated space with a partition

          Marilyn Monroe Ny fiainany manokana | Jereo koa | Meny fitetezanafanitarana azy.