Setting up Linux on a single partition involves preparing the disk, installing the OS, and configuring settings.
Setting up Linux on a single partition involves preparing the disk, installing the OS, and configuring settings.
This recovery partition exists because it serves a specific purpose...
The backup partition is already gone. I have an HP recovery USB and a duplicate of the recovery drive stored on the old hard drive from this machine.
You're wondering about installing on your recovery drive. It seems around 500 MB is typical. You might want to reduce your Windows partition size using a tool like "create or format harddisk partition." Once you have sufficient space—perhaps 20 GB should suffice if you don’t intend to store files there—run the distribution CD. If you don’t plan to install Arch or Gentoo, a user-friendly installer will guide you, offering an option to install the distro alongside Windows and let you pick the partition for installation.
I'll give it a shot and your recovery partition should be around 26 GB.