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How to have both Mac Os X and Linux installed and share the same home directory files

February 27th, 2009 bodom_lx 2 comments

So much time since my last post! I’m sure that the best way to come back to blog posting is a nice tutorial.
I’m going to write how to have the same home directory shared between Mac Os X and Gnu/Linux. Let me call Gnu/Linux just Linux from now on.

A unique place for your working directory on both Mac Os X and Linux!

The configuration I’m proposing should be very confortable, as it works with symbolic links.
It lets you to boot either Mac Os X or Linux and have the same directories and files for your everyday use. Meanwhile, the important configuration files and directories (e.g. ~/Library for Mac Os X, ~/.config for Linux) are kept separately on their corresponding partitions.
Another advantage of this configuration is that you can have a small partition dedicated to Linux – let’s say 10GB but could be even less – just for installing the programs you need, while your videos, documents, music files are kept inside the biggest partition, the one for Mac Os X.

Disclaimer, assumptions

Basically, you will mount your Mac Os X root partition in Linux, and soft-link your important directories to your Linux home directory.
You will then use them as there were real directories in your Linux home directory. For this how to, there are a couple of things I assume that:

  • You have Linux installed and running natively on your Mac(Book). I’m going to give commands with sudo, so configure it if you’re not using Ubuntu-based distros!
  • You know your partition layout. The following is mine. I’m going to use it as example:

    disk0s2 /dev/sda2 MacOsx /
    disk0s3 /dev/sda3 Linux /
    disk0s4 /dev/sda4 Swap

  • You have a clean Linux home directory. This means that you don’t have directories whose names are in conflict with those on your Mac Os X home directory
  • You are going to disable file system journaling on your Mac Os X root partition! Please read carefully this Wikipedia page about journaling and this Apple page about HFS+ journaling if you need more information.

Boot Mac Os X

Follow these instructions under Mac Os X:

Open a Terminal.

Identify your Mac Os X root partition:

$ sudo diskutil list

/dev/disk0
#: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER
0: GUID_partition_scheme *111.8 Gi disk0
1: EFI 200.0 Mi disk0s1
2: Apple_HFS MacOsX 99.9 Gi disk0s2
3: EFI 10.7 Gi disk0s3
4: Linux Swap 1.0 Gi disk0s4

Disable file system journaling for the partition:

$ sudo diskutil disablejournal disk0s2

Do a ls -n of your home directory to discover your user id uid:

$ ls -n

total 0
drwx——+ 11 501 20 374 25 Feb 17:43 Desktop
drwxrwxrwx+ 32 501 20 1088 26 Feb 18:19 Documents
drwxrwxrwx+ 8 501 20 272 26 Feb 18:06 Downloads
[Few Others ...]

My UID is 501. Keep your UID in mind, you will need it under Linux. You obtain the same results by using the command “id”.
Reboot your Mac.

Boot Linux

Follow these instructions in a linux shell.

Change your Linux user id (UID). To correctly share the same home directory between both OS, you need to have on Linux the same UID of your Mac Os X user.

sudo usermod -u <uid> <username>

(sudo usermod -u 501 bodom_lx in my case)

To have your new UID applied, either reboot or logout from every shell you opened, even from your desktop environment. Login again.

Create a directory in which you are going to mount Mac Os X root partition:

sudo mkdir /media/</strong>MacOsX</strong
sudo chmod 775 /media/</strong>MacOsX</strong>

put this line at the end of /etc/fstab, as root, with your favourite editor:

/dev/sda2 /media/MacOsX hfsplus rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=hal 0 0

Remember to change sda2 and MacOsX

Either reboot the system or type:

sudo mount /media/MacOsX

To mount your Mac Os X root directory in your mount point directory.

Now cd to your Linux home directory and begin to soft-link all of your important Mac Os X directories. Here are some of those I needed:

ln -s /media/MacOsX/Users/bodom_lx/Documents/ .
ln -s /media/MacOsX/Users/bodom_lx/Pictures/ .
ln -s /media/MacOsX/Users/bodom_lx/Projects/ .
[…and many more]
 

Don’t soft-link the Library directory.

Conclusions

Now you have the same important files shared on both Mac Os X and Linux, while the important hidden configuration files are kept in separate phyisical places.
You can listen to your Itunes mp3 collection on both operating systems. You can now develop programs under Gnu/Linux. You can reboot your machine to Mac Os X and take notes during the lectures, and so on! Hope you liked this how to, and comment it as well. Contact me if you find some mistakes or you’re in trouble!

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BD-things reaches Netcraft top 30000 in 4 months!

February 4th, 2009 bodom_lx No comments

Netcraft began to evalutate the new domain of my site on September, 23rd 2008. After one month, the blog made a jump of about 700k positions in their rankings. I thought that I could reach top 30000 in 6 months starting from the domain change .
I’ve just realized that I reached the target in these days. BD-things is currently at position 28850 in the “Most Visited Web Sites” according to Netcraft. I’m above www.vodafone.nl :) .
This also means that BD-things.net made a jump of 797573 positions in less than 5 months!
I’m very proud of this result, and hope that this exam session finishes soon to let me come back to post again

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One month without a post..

November 22nd, 2008 bodom_lx No comments

…but there is a reason behind this. I’m working hard to a Django powered project that (hopefully) will serve the Italian population that wants to travel at low costs.
After the launch of the site, I will come back with tons of use(less)ful posts that nobody will read :-)

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Categories: Blog Tags: , , , , , , , ,

EHLO Gnu/Linux, I’m back!

July 1st, 2008 bodom_lx 2 comments

After about 5 months of separation from my preferred operating system, the discontent brought by Mac Os X led me to a re-born love with Gnu/Linux.
I Installed Gentoo (~x86, not x86) on my MacBook, following some articles found on the Gentoo wiki and on Ubuntu wiki.
The result is the following:

Clean Desktop

Some things opened: Gnome Menu, Gnome Terminal, Nautilus, Scite

Features:

  • Gnome 2.22.2
  • MurrinaGilouche + Elementary Metacity (linklink)
  • black-white 2 Gloss Icons (link)
  • Screenlets [RingSensors] (link)
  • A wallpaper included in Gnome, still looking for the perfect one

Let’s have some fun with Gnu/Linux…again!

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