Need Windows to show OS on dual boot with Ubuntu - drive

I support a group of engineers who use dual boot systems with Windows 10 and Ubuntu 18.04, each on a separate SSD. With everyone working from home, if an engineer needs Ubuntu re-installe, they will need to do it themselves. The problem is, that to do this, the person will need to determine which SSD to re-install Ubuntu upon. What I need is a way to tell, from Windows, which OS is on which SSD. I have tried:
diskpart
wmic
PowerShell
System Information
I have found ways to list the SSD and its size, but none of them shows me the OS. In Linux I know several commands to get this information very easily, but Windows has me stumped. Can someone please help me with this?

I found the solution to my problem using PowerShell. I used the following command to reveal the systems disk for Windows:
Get-Disk | Where-Object IsSystem -eq $True | fl
Output of above command
Note both the model number and the first 3 digits of the AllocatedSize.  You do not want to install upon the disk with this information.
When installing Ubuntu and are presented with a choice for which disk to install upon, you now know which one not to use. So, you can safely install on the other SSD or disk.

Related

How to install redisGraph on mac with my existiing redis database

I have been trying for 2 days to install redisGraph on mac WITH my existing redis database, it can be done with redis cloud but i want to have it locally ( and free ).
I go redis working, but i don't understand, and can't find how to install modules on my mac.
Btw i have a M1 macbook pro (maybe it maters).
Can anyone please help me.
Have you tried building it locally?
see instructions here
Which compiler are you using, I'll suggest using GCC, preferably version 10 or 11

Ubuntu 16.04 screen completely freezes only mouse moves

Ever since I have upgraded my laptop (Click here for hardware specs.) my screen usually freezes. Mostly in chrome or Firefox browser. I am pretty sure this is a Nvidia driver problem but I can't seem to find the solution. I am running a Nvidia Quadro K2100M.
I am currently running Nvidia 361.42. I have tried using open source Xorg server without any luck.
The only solution I have found so far is forcefully turning off the computer by holding down the power button.
Things that I have tried:
I got keyboard input
I cannot switch to another terminal to restart lightdm
This problem came to me occasionally, making me really annoyed.
As illustrated in many blogs, this may be caused by graphic driver problem. For me, my desktop has a NVIDIA video card, you can run lspci | grep VGA to see what type of your video type, in my case, it returned:
02:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation G98 [GeForce 8400 GS Rev. 2] (rev a1)
I followed the instruction on jiakai zhang's blog to reinstall proper drivers for the desktop, hope this will help you.
The key steps in [1] are to reinstall the ubuntu desktop and nvidia drivier by:
$ sudo su
$ apt-get update
$ apt-get install --reinstall ubuntu-desktop
$ apt-get install unity
$ apt-get remove --purge nvidia*
$ reboot
$ sudo apt-get install nvidia-current
$ sudo reboot
Updating the grub settings worked for me! Do the following:
1. Open the GRUB configuration
sudo vi /etc/default/grub
2. Change the value of GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT from "quiet splash" to
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash intel_idle.max_cstate=1"
and save the file.
3. Update & Reboot
sudo update-grub
sudo reboot
More info:
This is a bug in the processor, known as the c-state bug. It causes total freezes when the CPU tries to enter an unsupported sleep state. It's a problem for many Bay Trail devices especially with newer (4.*) kernels. There is a simple workaround until it gets properly fixed upstream. You just need to pass a kernel boot parameter and the random freezing stops completely. The parameter may increase battery consumption slightly, but it will give you a usable system. You do this by editing the configuration file for GRUB as described above.
GRUB - boot loader package from the GNU Project, which provides a user the choice to boot one of multiple operating systems
installed on a computer or select a specific kernel configuration available on a particular operating system's partitions;
Intel Bay Trail - new Atom Processors from Intel. Atom is Intel's family of x86 and x86-64 processors that are optimized
for small computing devices, such as smartphones and mobile Internet devices;
C-States - used to optimize optimize or reduce power consumption in idle mode (i. e. when no code is executed) - (C0 to C8)
Reference: here.
I have since fixed this problem by re-installing Ubuntu 16.04 and not switching from the nouveau video driver. I also disable updates and everything been working good for about 2 months now.
Gaming is pretty good but I usually play steam games so doesn't push any kinda hard core graphics
Well, I had the same problem: My PC was freezing randomly. I tried Ubuntu 16, 17 and 18.04 and everything was the same. I tried several drivers and didn't get a solution. I tried several solutions that I found in the forums (including this) and got bad and harmful results.
My solution was: I stopped using the graphical nvidia card, removed it and now I'm using the integrated Intel HD graphics card (Intel® HD Graphics 530 card (Skylake GT2)) and all the problems were solved!
I fixed mine using a few commands from #Qoros solution above. i just ran apt-get update, apt-get install nvidia-current, and sudo reboot. cheers to #Qoros btw!
For me, none of the approaches described in rest of the answers worked.
I was opening multiple terminal tabs running some heavy processes and ubuntu used to freeze when I had 6-7 tabs. I tried monitoring the resources used while I was starting my processes in terminal tabs. You can do it by opening System Monitor app and going to Resources tab.
What I noticed is that when my RAM(8GB) and my swap space(1GB) were completely used up, ubuntu would freeze.
As a solution, I increased my swap space and made it 16GB. After this memory never gets used completely and ubuntu doesn't freeze.
https://askubuntu.com/questions/178712/how-to-increase-swap-space decsibes how to increase swap space.

Windows 8 advanced startup command prompt documentation

I take part in development of disk filter driver.
Windows 8 has special recovery mode: Advanced Startup Command Prompt.
It is similar to Safe Mode Command Prompt in previous versions of Windows. But it works differently. For example not all commands are available. And not all drivers are loaded. And our driver is not loaded too.
Our driver must be loaded, because it encrypt/decrypt disk content. Without it disk content is unavailable.
How we can solve this problem? How driver can force Windows to load it in Advanced Startup Command Prompt? Probably we need to develop special type of driver, for this mode?
I cannot find detailed documentation about how Advanced Startup Command Prompt works. Is such documentation exist?
just add a small unencrypted boot bcd/swap partition upon making your install image. windows makes its own 300 meg partition too. simple to build.
3 partitions after a diskpart clean
1 windows partition (installed upon w8 1st reboot on install)
2 ntfs partition unencrypted that holds the BCD, SWAP, some other stuff
3 a single VHD File, or more :), on a huge encrypted partition
use easy bcd to choose the vhd of your choice, if you go from disk to disk, all you need is the VHD and the original BCD that the Windows was installed into. Basically a windows installation ties to the BCD, cant move one vhd from one disk to another without the BCD.
Pro,Ultimate,Server, et al are vhd bootable

Suggestions on Setting up Development Environment

After referring to many posts, opinions and feedback from SO, I have just bought a Lenovo Thinkpad T410 . x64 Win 7 Prof, 500 GB # 7200 RPM , Core i7 620M processor, 4GB DDR3 RAM.
I am now setting up my development environment on the new machine. I need your suggestions in setting up a clean, structured and risk-free Development Environment.
Something about what I intend to do on this machine:
I am Entrepreneur bootstrapping my Startup. So I will have business related purposes (presentations) other than Coding.
I do coding on Microsoft stack currently for some of my other projects. But will start coding in other technologies such as RoR. So I need to have MS products (VS, IIS) and other OSS'
This machine also doubles up as production environment on top of Development Environment.
I don't have a separate Desktop for doing heavy lifting. This is my whole and sole workstation.
I have read a lot about VMwares here and how they help to keep the machine clean and ordered which you can just wipe out clean and have reinstalled as you wish. Is it a good thing to have VMs each for Microsoft stact, RoR stact and so on or have all of them installed on my main machine itself.
Also, apart from this, it would be great if someone can suggest some good options for Firewall+Antivirus+Malware stack (considering that this is a Win 7 machine)
ThanQ
This machine also doubles up as
production environment on top of
Development Environment.
You are setting yourself up for a world of hurt.
Aside from that, it is just common sense that you should use some form of VCS (I recommend Git) and store all your code NOT on your development machine. You should be able to checkout out your code, run a script, and be up and running. You are bootstrapping a startup; pay the $12/month to keep your code safe.
VMs are a good idea if you need to support different environments, for example Win7, Win Vista, and perhaps some flavor of linux. If you take my suggestion and use a remote VCS setup, you can checkout from the remote source onto your VMs.
Another benefit of VMs is you can set up a base install, with all the software you need, and create an image of it, so from that point on you can pass the image around, and you won't need to install the baseline software again.

Best setup for Linux development from Windows? [closed]

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What's the best setup for developing Linux apps from a Windows workstation? Right now I'm connected via SSH to our Linux development server and am using Eclipse, forwarded over SSH via PuTTY, to the public domain version of Xming running on my Windows workstation. It works, but it's not great; Eclipse's response times are far from snappy (noticeably worse than Eclipse running natively on my much slower Windows workstation), I can't resize some dialog boxes, and I haven't figured out a good way to reconfigure my fonts.
Is there a better setup available?
Edit: This is for C/C++ development.
Options for Linux on Windows:
Tools Only
Given you're using Eclipse I'm going to assume you want a full IDE, but if you can get by with just the GNU/Linux tools, there are a few choices.
cygwin gives you a bash shell with lots of tools, including an X11 server. This has been around awhile and is mature.
msys is a smaller, lightweight alternative to cygwin.
GNU utilities for Win32 is another lightweight alternative. These are native versions of the tools, as opposed to cygwin which requires a cygwin DLL to fake out its tools into thinking they are running on Linux.
Linux in a Windows Process
There are several packages that will run Linux as a Windows process, without simulating an entire PC as virtualization does. They use Cooperative Linux, a.k.a. coLinux, which is limited to 32-bit systems. These don't have the overhead of virtualizing, and they start up faster since you're not booting a virtual PC. This is a little more on the experimental side and may not be as stable as some of the virtualization options.
Portable Ubuntu
andLinux
Virtualization
Virtualization software lets you boot up another OS in a virtual PC, one that shares hardware with the host OS. This is pretty tried-and-true. There are nice options here for taking snapshots of your Virtual PC in a particular state, suspend/resume a virtual PC, etc. It's nice to be able to experiment with a virtual PC, add a few packages, then revert to a previous snapshot and "start clean".
VMWare
VirtualBox
VirtualPC
In my case...
Sounds like your environment has different performance characteristics, but here's my situation: I started out with Eclipse on my Windows laptop (doing Rails development), found this sluggish, and switched to using putty to ssh into a fast Linux box. I do my editing via an emacs running on the Linux server, displayed on Windows using Xming. Or I use native emacs on Windows, editing the files shared via NFS. The latter is slower in my environment due to sluggish saves.
When working from home, I ditch X because it is too slow with remote clients, and just run emacs -nw within a putty window. I then use GNU screen so that I have multiple "windows", and so that I can easily resume where I left off if my network connection flakes out.
The best approach that I've found is to:
keep your code portable
develop natively on your desktop
verify any OS dependencies (minimize these as much as possible)
deploy to your target regularly, test & debug there
I know that this isn't a direct answer, but using an IDE for development through X is painful with most of the free tools. The only way that I've been productive doing work this way was when I was running a UNIX-like on my desktop so X was native. If you are going to use this approach, try a commercial X solution on the desktop.
Other than that, consider ditching the IDE and doing your development and debugging via SSH, a terminal editor (e.g., vi, pico, ee, emacs), make/ant, and gdb.
The best approach for you is going to be driven by your programming language and the type of application you're developing. If you are doing GUI applications, then using X might be the only approach that is acceptable. If you are doing back-office/daemon development, then the SSH and terminal approach will probably work though you probably want to get really comfortable with either vi or emacs.
EDIT: just noticed that you are doing C/C++ development. Consider using a cross platform framework if you aren't already. Using something like Qt, APR, ACE, or Poco should make it possible to natively develop under Windows with a deploy/debug step to your Linux environment.
For development I usually use a Linux virtual machine on my Windows box. It will probably send Linux users running to the bathroom to wash their hands, but I do all of my development in Visual Studio, and I have a custom Visual Studio plugin that invokes G++ through the virtual machine and pipes the output into the VS output window. With a quick change of a Combo box I can build and test for Windows or Linux.
An easy to setup option would be to run Eclipse natively in windows but deploy the code via a Samba share on the Linux machine (which you can mount as another drive) (or SSH/SCP if SMB is not an option) and then run it there via SSH console.
Another easy to setup option is to simply develop on Linux via freenx or a similar tool instead of a full blown X session, check this answer: https://serverfault.com/questions/11367/remote-desktopping-from-windows-to-linux/11372#11372
The other options (Virtualization, Linux running inside windows, Cygwin) are indeed valid but have their drawbacks, like being more machine demanding, harder to setup, or not equivalent enough to the actual linux environment, but may very well be worth your while if you have the machine and the scenario justifies their use.
Doing everything on the Linux side will always have some drawbacks
if your machine is Windows.
I personally have a Linux box where everybody else has Windows and
do Windows dev inside a VM, but it has costed me a lot of RAM and some network setup pains.
I find coLinux tremendously helpful when developing on Windows for Linux, it's basically a linux system running in parallel to your Windows OS (i.e. as a service) and can be configured to simply show up on your LAN, basically like a virtual machine does. Also, it's much more full featured than CygWin, and its performance is really remarkable - I can easily run non-trivial stuff under coLinux, and still run simulators at 90+ fps.
Also, coLinux can be easily set up to run X11 and window managers like gnome/KDE, so that you can for example use something like vnc to access your linux desktop.
Cooperative Linux is the first working free and open source method for optimally running Linux on Microsoft Windows natively. More generally, Cooperative Linux (short-named coLinux) is a port of the Linux kernel that allows it to run cooperatively alongside another operating system on a single machine
. For instance, it allows one to freely run Linux on Windows 2000/XP, without using a commercial PC virtualization software
such as VMware, in a way which is much more optimal than using any general purpose PC virtualization software.
(source: colinux.org)
There are multiple solutions, I'd recommend No. 1
A VM (Virtual Machine) running a flavor of linux as a guest operating system inside Windows. Start with VirtualBox which is free.
To make managing it easier you can use a tool like Vagrant. Vagrant is a tool for building and managing virtual machine environments in a single workflow. With an easy-to-use workflow and focus on automation, Vagrant lowers development environment setup time, increases production parity. So you code in your Windows PC and compile/run the application on a Linux system using Vagrant. Vagrant is free! Similar tool: Docker can be used too. For this setup you can use any IDE, I'd recommend VSCode its quite handy for C/C++ with intellisense but Eclipse should work too.
Web based tool like Nitrous.io which is discontinued, but you can host your own open-source version of the Nitrous IDE called Nitrous Solo which lets you host your own instance of the Nitrous IDE on your preferred cloud provider.
Windows 10 provides provides Windows Subsystem for Linux, try using that to compile and run your project. This requires a 64-bit version of Windows 10 Anniversary Update or later (build 1607+).
Cygwin / MinGW are popular bash tools for Windows, they might be able to compile and/or run your application.
Cygwin might be helpful.
I've done what you want to do for exactly the same reason: full control over the output (you're having font issues with your current solution) and much slower Windows machine than the remote Linux development box.
Most answers are bogus: having a "Linux development environment" is not just "having an IDE". It's about having the whole Un*x power at your fingertips.
Is it a local or remote Linux server? bandwith issues? Because on a LAN, even an old 100 MBit/s LAN, FreeNX flies. How's the load on that Linux server?
Setup the free FreeNX on the Linux system, install the free FreeNX client on the Windows machine and bingo, you've got your Linux development environment at your fingertips.
FreeNX is much more efficient than VNC, it's night day (VNC is actually pretty bad perfs wise, even compare to Windows's Remote Desktop... But FreeNX flies).
Regarding speed, a long time ago, I set up my main Linux workstation (it was a Pentium 4 / 2GB of memory back in the days) on which I was developing full-time using IntelliJ IDEA (another IDE), to serve a full X session (complete with a window manager etc.) that another developer was displaying remotely to... run another IntelliJ instance (and access all the Un*x niceties). It was on a LAN 100 Mbit/s and it was as if the app was local for the other developer.
Anyway, on today's hardware I cannot imagine how this could not work: I now have here a Core 2 Duo / 4GB of ram as my main desktop and a Gigabit LAN.
Such a setup was working perfectly 4 years ago, it would work perfectly today.
Now if you tell me you have bandwith issues or that the Linux machine you've got your account on is under heavy load or that it's not on the LAN, then things may be different...
How the younger developers who want a powerful Un*x system do it at the company I'm consulting for nowadays (that only has Windows desktops)? Most of them bring their shiny MacBook Pro and use that to develop ;)
I'm using xming as well and suffer from the same problems with Eclipse. Apparently, neither switching to cygwin makes it fast enough. Eventually I switched to developing in vim via xming. It doesn't take as much time as I feared to get used to all the key combinations, and the performance is absolutely smooth. Actually, now sometimes I use vim even when working natively.
Either a Virtual Machine with a Linux-based dev environment, or a local copy of some toolchain-agnostic IDE (e.g. Notepad++, with testing done via MinGW or CygWin as far as you can), or just write in Notepad++ and keep uploading to your dev machine and testing there, which is what I do.
You might try other X servers on Windows such as xwin32 and hummingbird. Note that these are commercial implementations.
Another solution is to install a VM server on your Windows box and install Linux on the VM. Options include VMware (non-free) and Microsoft Virtual PC (free download). VMware is much nicer than VirtualPC (64-bit support, more incentive to support Linux client OSes, etc.).
EDIT: In the last 13 years since this post was originally made, Cygwin/X (and Xming) has gotten a lot better. It's worth trying again. I now use it for my everyday work again.
You could take a look at setting up a svn server on the linux box and then using something like TeamCity todo a build on commit. You could write your code locally and do a commit when you want it to be compiled.
I don't know if there's a more modern route, but the standard way in my time was to run X Windows in Microsoft Windows, that way you can run any number of applications on your Ubuntu machine and control them and display them in Microsoft Windows
Check Check out.
You could try using any of the linux distros for windows, even windows-store have ubuntu, SUSE etc for windows and this could help reduce your coding efforts. This linux distros contain linux shell, kernel etc so you won't be needing linux system everytime debugging or testing your code.
You could also use Visual Studio Code which is far better and fast compared to eclipse and is even supported in linux and mac.
Check this for ubuntu distro on windows store.
Linux distros can also be downloaded from other sources but microsoft urges to use the one from Windows-Store.
Use Linux! I usually have the other problem: developing win under linux.
There is no reason for not doing so: I have win running on a virtual box now almost all the time.
Linux comes with a lot of development tools.
The problem is:
is it a graphical interface?
If no you will have no problems as soon as your code STD/portable.
(X allows you simple stuff too but for an nice application today you need a bit more.)
If Yes then you will have a lot of problems when you actually port the code
on the running platform.
Is it supposed to be portable/exchangeable between linux and windows?
if not, just develop on the native OS. Way less pain. You have Eclipse for both
platforms. Even if you think to port the code on a later stage,
just do the work for one first.
I developed a couple of graphical application under linux which are actually right now
used only under windows. My recipe is: GTK/GNOME. I made it running with cygwin and mingw.
But I guess that Qt has the same usable environment too.
My code went on win with no changes!
[ok.. a couple of touching on file paths... but was a bug..]
There is no way to develop under win and hope to be running on linux unless you are sure
not to use any win libs. That is: in a graphical application almost no chance. Or a lot of
checking... Or you will not be using any win facility. Forget Visual Studio.
Check indeed wine and the winehq pages.
Unless the problem is another, like: using team sharing facilities, or svn or whatever.
Which is not a code development problem but a bit more on the organizational side.
Bottom line:
It is way easier to port a free code on win then a proprietary code on the free market.