I want to install thunderbird and lighning on an Ubuntu o/s drive and access an existing calendar on another Ubuntu drive
Hi! I'm running Ubuntu 12.04 on an old hard drive and migrating to Ubuntu 14.04 on a new SSD. I previously installed and used thunderbird 38.4.0 and lightning 4.0.4 on the HD drive. I have installed the same versions of thunderbird and lightning on the SSD, created a new profile with the same account information. Within that profile there is a new name for the .default directory. Still on the SSD changed the name of new profile, then linked the original name of the new profile to the profile on the hard drive. Within that installation, I created a link with the name of the new .default directory on the SSD to the existing .default directory on the HD. After booting to Ubuntu 14.04, mail works fine but lightning starts with a warning that the version of lightning must be 4.0 or later. But it is as is the version on the 12.04 system. In the same session when I try to look at the calendar, the system crashes.
So the basic question is how to use one drive for the OS and local apps, and another drive for the data (.i.e., mailbox and calendar in this case). If this configuration works, I can maintain new OS's and applications on one drive and maintain data on another drive.
Todas as respostas (2)
I don't follow what you did.
So the basic question is how to use one drive for the OS and local apps, and another drive for the data
Why don't you simply mount /home on a new partition on the other drive?
christ1, thanks for your response. Sorry for the length of the post but I wanted to cover all the steps that I have already taken. To your question, I'm cautious about upgrading to new OS releases and want to be flexible to explore other distributions of Linux. I've partitioned the SSD for multi-boot (currently, Windows, Ubuntu 14.04, and Ubuntu 15.04; Ubuntu 12.04 still boots from the HD.) If I were to simply mount /home, then with every upgrade or exploration of another distro, the applications in /home would be revised for that explicit distro. So, what I have done is left 'home' on each OS's partition and linked from there to data folders on the hard drive (e.g., Documents, Music, etc.). With that structure the app's stay in sync with each distro' and the data is accessible to all.