Here is a link to my original thread a while back, when i was trying to decide if I should use windows or linux when I first built the server.
I chose windows since I was having trouble understanding how linux would handle my windows files. But windows crashed on me and I think I am ready to give linux another shot.I am leaning heavily towards Fedora Core as my distro. From my last thread, i hear it has a nice GUI for samba, and also it has recently been installe don one of my machines at work, so I would like to learn to use it better. I don't actually have to use the OS really at work, it just runs a program we use, so all I really need to know is how to run that program, but knowing more can't hurt.
So here goes, I have a 36GB WD raptor, which will be my OS drive, think that will be sufficent? I have another 300GB(or maybe it was 250, I don't recall) SATA drive, 2x250GB IDE drives and 1 more 80GB 5400 rpm drive(this one SMART tells me is going bad, so it will likely get backed up to one of the other drives and then either trashed or put in another machine for stuff that I may nto be too worried about if I lose. 1 of the 250GB drives is exmpty, I just copied what was on it to another drive. The other 2 drives, 1 is pretty full and the other is about half. These drives are all NTFS partitions
Now from what I got from my original thread, linux has poor read/write abilities to NTFS partitions, and windows does not support ext3 at all. I was informed that an easy way around this is to have 1 FAT32 partition shared between the 2 machines(maybe I could use my 80GB drive for this). Basically I am still just slightly confused about the handling of the files and file systems.
All I really need the linux system to do is share the drives to my laptop and main machine, both windows xp. Obviously I want to play with the linux machine, but don't know how often i would need to access the NTFS partitions from linux. But if I do, will the FAT32 partition allow me to move files between the NTFS and ext3 file systems?
I was told in the other thread that my best option is to back up all my NTFS drives and then reformat them all to ext3 and then put the data back on them, so that way i will have full read and write to them under linux, and samba will still allow me to read/write to them from my windows machines right? Backing up all this data sounds like a chore, especially since I don't currently have an OS on that machine. So is this my best option? And if so, how should I go about it?
I guess thats it for now, but I will probablly have more questions later.
Cliffs Notes:
Have an old windows server with several NTFS drives
Want to move from windows to linux(Fedora Core most likely)
Need to know what I need to know to get access to my files on the linux machine, from the windows machines.
Also wondering if it is worth it and what th ebest way would be to access my drives form the linux machine itself.
			
			I chose windows since I was having trouble understanding how linux would handle my windows files. But windows crashed on me and I think I am ready to give linux another shot.I am leaning heavily towards Fedora Core as my distro. From my last thread, i hear it has a nice GUI for samba, and also it has recently been installe don one of my machines at work, so I would like to learn to use it better. I don't actually have to use the OS really at work, it just runs a program we use, so all I really need to know is how to run that program, but knowing more can't hurt.
So here goes, I have a 36GB WD raptor, which will be my OS drive, think that will be sufficent? I have another 300GB(or maybe it was 250, I don't recall) SATA drive, 2x250GB IDE drives and 1 more 80GB 5400 rpm drive(this one SMART tells me is going bad, so it will likely get backed up to one of the other drives and then either trashed or put in another machine for stuff that I may nto be too worried about if I lose. 1 of the 250GB drives is exmpty, I just copied what was on it to another drive. The other 2 drives, 1 is pretty full and the other is about half. These drives are all NTFS partitions
Now from what I got from my original thread, linux has poor read/write abilities to NTFS partitions, and windows does not support ext3 at all. I was informed that an easy way around this is to have 1 FAT32 partition shared between the 2 machines(maybe I could use my 80GB drive for this). Basically I am still just slightly confused about the handling of the files and file systems.
All I really need the linux system to do is share the drives to my laptop and main machine, both windows xp. Obviously I want to play with the linux machine, but don't know how often i would need to access the NTFS partitions from linux. But if I do, will the FAT32 partition allow me to move files between the NTFS and ext3 file systems?
I was told in the other thread that my best option is to back up all my NTFS drives and then reformat them all to ext3 and then put the data back on them, so that way i will have full read and write to them under linux, and samba will still allow me to read/write to them from my windows machines right? Backing up all this data sounds like a chore, especially since I don't currently have an OS on that machine. So is this my best option? And if so, how should I go about it?
I guess thats it for now, but I will probablly have more questions later.
Cliffs Notes:
Have an old windows server with several NTFS drives
Want to move from windows to linux(Fedora Core most likely)
Need to know what I need to know to get access to my files on the linux machine, from the windows machines.
Also wondering if it is worth it and what th ebest way would be to access my drives form the linux machine itself.
				
		
			