I have been told that the way to utilize the somewhat strange way my Ubuntu is
set up is to use the WINEPREFIX. I have some windoze programs that need to know
about each other so they need to be in the same drive_c
Here are pertinent specifics of my system:
>
> root at
kayve-laptop:/media/2c512d2e-fcf5-4ef5-8200-e3c79a8a1aca/home/kayve# mount |
grep ext4
> /dev/sda6 on / type ext4 (rw,commit=0)
> /dev/sda1 on /media/2c512d2e-fcf5-4ef5-8200-e3c79a8a1aca type ext4
(rw,nosuid,nodev,uhelper=udisks)
> root at
kayve-laptop:/media/2c512d2e-fcf5-4ef5-8200-e3c79a8a1aca/home/kayve# df -h
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/sda6 124G 98G 20G 84% /
> none 1.9G 300K 1.9G 1% /dev
> none 1.9G 1.3M 1.9G 1% /dev/shm
> none 1.9G 220K 1.9G 1% /var/run
> none 1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /var/lock
> /dev/sr0 239M 239M 0 100% /media/CB80
> /dev/sda1 319G 219G 84G 73%
/media/2c512d2e-fcf5-4ef5-8200-e3c79a8a1aca
> root at
kayve-laptop:/media/2c512d2e-fcf5-4ef5-8200-e3c79a8a1aca/home/kayve#
>
/dev/sda1 was the original Ubuntu system on the disk that I installed into my
laptop
http://www.monkeyview.net/id/965/fsck/xorg_log/P1300126.vhtml
all contained on the above disk also is /dev/sda6, as seen in the above df -h
and also they are both ext4. Note that /dev/sda1 has more than twice the space
and more than 4 times the amount of free space. Therefore, I was hoping to use
WINEPREFIX to redirect my wine installation of my application constellation.
However, I am feeling wary of the fact that when I created the soft link,
attempting to chown the directory to my user has failed.
http://kayve.net/old_part_root.png
My original attempts too utilize wine failed and I am not sure how to explain
this, well, I understand the security concerns of using wine under root.
Is the solution just chmod 770 and create a group for the symbolic link? How
can I force my applications to utilize the symbolic link with the proper
permissions? Is there any problem here I should just set the WINEPREFIX
variable and run wine setup.exe? Should I save my CD data under the drive_c
directory?