Installer Linux Sur Windows Xp

12/27/2017by

You can install Windows from inside Linux onto your physical hard drive, but you need separate partition as NTFS or FAT32. Below is a way to use a virtual machine to do the actual installation, but it's performed on your hard drive. • Prepare a new partition onto where you want to install Windows. • Start the Windows installation with a Qemu virtual machine and your physical hard drive mapped (target partition can't be mounted): qemu -hda /dev/sda -cdrom winxp.iso -m 1G -boot d --enable-kvm • Install Windows on the partition you created. • Reinstall Grub (if partition isn't first, you need to do a trick with mapping hd's, its working for me).

You cant install easy like wubi in windows. Yo have to create virtual machine of windows. If you have iso file for windows os, you follow the bellow, Download, and you will get the deb file, use Ubuntu software center to install. After install it, • Select 'NEW' • Name OS, • Select RAM size, • select Hardrive type, • Select VDI, • Select Dynamically allocated(for using available free space) else select fixed size(it's not recommended by me), • Select Hard Disk size • Your virtual machine is ready, • To start it, Go to settings -->Storage, Here select iso file you have stored in system • Click ok, and select start. This is hardly a complete answer, but it may help. I have a development machine here with Windows 7 and Kubuntu; I used a 128 GB SSD for Windows (the whole thing) and have Kubuntu dominant on my other three hard drives, with a limited partition made for media files in Windows.

Any time I do have to reinstall Windows, I simply pull out the SATA cables from the back of my other hard drives first. After the install, I power down, plug them back in, power up, and set up Windows to use the proper directories (on the other hard drives) for user documents. I've done this more than once and it's yet to give me any trouble. GRUB even recognized it after a quick device scan. I understand that you're trying to do this on a single hard drive, but everyone else has already highlighted the issues behind this (mostly with Windows being a complete #$%@&* about having to share).

Installer Linux Sur Windows Xp

If you can get a cheap SSD or even HDD, and plug it in in parallel, then keep your more-responsible OSes on the major drives, it should make the process simple. You won't even have to worry about partitioning. (I will also say that if you do do it this way, you'll save yourself a lot of trouble by keeping every drive either MBR or GPT; try not to mix and match. It makes booting more complicated than anyone wants to deal with.) Best of luck!

Saviez-vous qu'on peut tester Linux sur son ordinateur sans rien installer sur son disque dur? Vous pouvez l'installer depuis Windows.

Contents • • • • • • • • • Installing Ubuntu from within Windows The Windows-based Ubuntu Installer (Wubi) allows you to install and uninstall Ubuntu from within Microsoft Windows. It lets a Microsoft Windows user try Ubuntu without risking any data loss due to disk formatting or partitioning.

Wubi requires Windows 98, ME, 2000, XP, Vista, Windows 7. NOTE: Hibernation is not supported when installing Ubuntu via Wubi. Download Wubi Download Wubi from the, this will download the latest version by default.

You can download other versions of Ubuntu Install Ubuntu • Within Microsoft Windows, place your downloaded ISO in the same directory as the Wubi, and run the installer. • In the Installation Drive list, select the drive that you want to install Ubuntu. • In the Installation Size list, select the amount of space that you want to allocate to Ubuntu. • In the Desktop Environment list, select Ubuntu. If you wish to install Kubuntu, Xubuntu or another official derivative of Ubuntu, select your preferred one from the drop-down list. • In the Language list, select your preferred language. • In the Username box, enter a username for your Ubuntu account.

• In the Password box, enter a password for your Ubuntu account. Repeat this password on the second line. • Select Install. The Ubuntu Setup progress window appears. When Ubuntu has finished installing, the Completing the Ubuntu Setup Wizard window appears. • Select Reboot now and click Finish.

Your computer restarts and the Windows Boot Manager appears. • Using your keyboard’s up and down arrow keys, select Ubuntu and press Enter. Ubuntu loads and the Checking the installation wizard appears.

Ubuntu is now installed. NOTE: Since Wubi installs Ubuntu on the same file partition as Windows, there may be a slight degradation in Ubuntu’s performance over time due to file fragmentation. Windows-based Un-installation When installed from Microsoft Windows, Ubuntu can be uninstalled using Microsoft Window’s standard Add or Remove Programs/Uninstall a program option. Uninstall from Windows XP • From the Start menu, select Control Panel.

The Control Panel appears. • Select Add or Remove Programs. Add or Remove Programs appears. • Select Ubuntu and click Remove. The Wubi Uninstall window appears.

• Click Uninstall. Ubuntu uninstalls. The Completing the Wubi Uninstall Wizard appears. • Click Finish. Ubuntu is uninstalled. Uninstall from Windows Vista or Windows 7 Removing Ubuntu in Windows Vista or Windows 7 follows the standard Uninstall a program option in Microsoft Windows. • From the Start menu, select Control Panel.

The Control Panel appears. • Under Programs, select Uninstall a program. The Uninstall or change a program window appears. • Select Ubuntu and then click Uninstall/Change.

The Wubi Uninstall window appears. • Click Uninstall. The progress wizard appears. The Completing the Wubi Uninstall Wizard appears. • Click Finish. Ubuntu is uninstalled. Uninstall from Windows 8 Removing Ubuntu from Windows 8 is done in a similar manner to Windows Vista and Windows 7, however there is a different procedure for accessing the Programs and Features.

• Select any tile by right-clicking any non-store application in your Start screen. • On the bar that opens at the bottom, select Uninstall. This will open the Programs and Features dialog on your desktop. • Note: This will not uninstall that application. • Select Ubuntu and then click Uninstall/Change. The Wubi Uninstall window appears.

• Click Uninstall. The progress wizard appears. The Completing the Wubi Uninstall Wizard appears.

Download Jibjab Videos Iphone. • Click Finish. Ubuntu has been successfully removed from your computer. Selecting Windows or Ubuntu If you installed Ubuntu via the Wubi installer, the Windows (NT) Boot Loader (ntldr) loads.

You can choose which operating system to 'boot-up' into. To Choose Which Operating System Boots-Up • Turn on or restart your system. The Windows Boot Manager appears.

• Using your keyboard’s up and down arrow keys, select the operating system that you want to load. The desired operating system loads. NOTE: The default operating system is Microsoft Windows. If you do not choose an operating system, Microsoft Windows will automatically load. External Links Wubi installer Wubi.

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