Installing Linux Mint 5 Elyssa
So, after some troubles with my computer (namely, my Ubuntu Feisty partition filling up so much that I couldn’t log in), I needed to wipe everything and start fresh.
Fresh like Mint.
I decided to check out Linux Mint after a recommendation. What sold me on it was a screenshot showing that it only had one taskbar/menubar. There was no top and bottom bar business like Ubuntu has that wastes valuable screen real estate.
The process wasn’t painless, though. Apparently a new version of some part of the OS decides not to distinguish between IDE and SATA drives anymore when naming devices. My primary IDE drive became /dev/sdd and so it was listed after my e-SATA and SATA drives when it came time to install GRUB.
Since I have a Windows partition on the same IDE drive as the Linux partition, this caused all kinds of problems and I couldn’t boot into any OS.
After trying a few things I stumbled across a forum posting that made something a bit more clear. I needed to change the numbering for GRUB back to (hd0,2) instead of (hd3,2) in the menu.lst file without changing the device reference from /dev/sdd3 to /dev/hdd3. I was able to boot into the LiveCD and edit that file that was on the drive.
I restarted from there and it actually worked. It only took a few extra hours and some frustration over one little part. The rest of the installation was very easy and straightforward.
July 4th, 2008 at 10:01 pm
>filling up so much that I couldn’t log in), I needed to wipe >everything and start fresh.
Next time it happens, no need to wipe all… Usually, you can remove the old deb archives from /var/cache/apt…. and you can also remove obsolete packages with deb-orphan… This is also true for mint-linux.
July 4th, 2008 at 11:10 pm
Thanks, oz, that is good to know for the future. I’m happy that I had a good reason to finally upgrade, though. I was still running Ubuntu 7.04 and it was time for something new. I’m really liking Linux Mint so far.