• 6 Posts
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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: March 13th, 2025

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  • Thank you. And man, I so want to do this. Is there a tutorial that you know of that is good? I don’t even know what to search for, to be honest. I do want to build an image and work on it for a little while and then when I feel that it is ready, I want to install it on my pc. So basically, I want to reinstall my Cachy OS system, but I don’t want to start from scratch. I want to build it in a VM, and add all of my apps to it and configure everything until it is a 100% match of my current system. Without any of my personal files because for that, I have a dejadup back up that I’ll just restore to the new install.




  • lol. Yup. Windows first checks for an efi partition. If there is one, it uses it, if there isn’t, it the creates its own. At first I didn’t know this, and every time I reinstalled my Linux system, windows is gone from the boot menu. It was a mystery until some random person online told me that. So, I then manually moved windows’ boot partition and gave it to it, and then deleted it from being in the same folder with the Linux one. Lucky for me, I always give the Linux boot partition a whole 1GB even though people recommend 300MiB or 500.






  • That’s pretty awesome that you can actually take a VM and make it an actual OS. I seriously need to learn how to do that. Also, the only thing I was mostly told is that the new motherboard might not know where the boot partition is, so like you said, I may need to chroot and let it know where it is. I have been told that it is just

    sudo pacman -S grub
    

    and

    sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
    

    . And I’m not sure if that is it or if there is something else I may need to run. I have moved an SSD from PC to another before and it was plug-n-play. Like it just booted right away into the system. So not sure. I’ll see what happens.










  • I’ve never used the iGPU on my old CPU. I just never needed it. And yes, I purposefully bought the same CPU generation and the same socket and manufacturer mobo, JUST to avoid this type of issue. Also, I don’t see the need to spend double the money if AM4 and 5th Gen AMD has been working fantastically for me.

    There is a small chance you’ll have to change your fstab depending on how it’s configured; if it’s done by drive UUID, it won’t be a problem.

    This is the part that worries me the most. I don’t know much about this whole UUID stuff (I’ll learn of course). I HAVE moved ssds between machines before without an issue, but that was all Linux. This time it’s a dualboot