Protecting Dualbooting Windows from dangerous code (like rm -rf)





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I'm thinking of dualbooting Windows 10 and Ubuntu in different partitions of the same SSD. If codes like rm -rf somehow happens in the Ubuntu partition, does this affect Windows, or does it leave other partitions alone? And if it DOES affect the Windows partition, how can I prevent this from happening?










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    I'm thinking of dualbooting Windows 10 and Ubuntu in different partitions of the same SSD. If codes like rm -rf somehow happens in the Ubuntu partition, does this affect Windows, or does it leave other partitions alone? And if it DOES affect the Windows partition, how can I prevent this from happening?










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      I'm thinking of dualbooting Windows 10 and Ubuntu in different partitions of the same SSD. If codes like rm -rf somehow happens in the Ubuntu partition, does this affect Windows, or does it leave other partitions alone? And if it DOES affect the Windows partition, how can I prevent this from happening?










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      I'm thinking of dualbooting Windows 10 and Ubuntu in different partitions of the same SSD. If codes like rm -rf somehow happens in the Ubuntu partition, does this affect Windows, or does it leave other partitions alone? And if it DOES affect the Windows partition, how can I prevent this from happening?







      dual-boot partitioning 18.04 windows-10






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      K. PaulK. Paul

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          It doesn't affect the windows partition, because you're running it from your Ubuntu machine.



          Picture it like this



          /dev/sda1 ntfs-bootfile
          /dev/sda2 ntfs-win
          /dev/sda5 ext4-root --> (YOUR LOCATION NOW)
          /dev/sda6 ext4-swap


          If you run rm -rf within your location, it would affect sda5 partition—in which your Ubuntu system reside. So it only affect Ubuntu.



          Supposing you have grub boot loader to load the 2 OS (Ubuntu and Windows), if you accidentally remove GRUB file aswell, Windows would not be able to boot, but the data inside will remain intact.






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            No it does not effect the windows partition.






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              2 Answers
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              2 Answers
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              active

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              It doesn't affect the windows partition, because you're running it from your Ubuntu machine.



              Picture it like this



              /dev/sda1 ntfs-bootfile
              /dev/sda2 ntfs-win
              /dev/sda5 ext4-root --> (YOUR LOCATION NOW)
              /dev/sda6 ext4-swap


              If you run rm -rf within your location, it would affect sda5 partition—in which your Ubuntu system reside. So it only affect Ubuntu.



              Supposing you have grub boot loader to load the 2 OS (Ubuntu and Windows), if you accidentally remove GRUB file aswell, Windows would not be able to boot, but the data inside will remain intact.






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                2














                It doesn't affect the windows partition, because you're running it from your Ubuntu machine.



                Picture it like this



                /dev/sda1 ntfs-bootfile
                /dev/sda2 ntfs-win
                /dev/sda5 ext4-root --> (YOUR LOCATION NOW)
                /dev/sda6 ext4-swap


                If you run rm -rf within your location, it would affect sda5 partition—in which your Ubuntu system reside. So it only affect Ubuntu.



                Supposing you have grub boot loader to load the 2 OS (Ubuntu and Windows), if you accidentally remove GRUB file aswell, Windows would not be able to boot, but the data inside will remain intact.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  It doesn't affect the windows partition, because you're running it from your Ubuntu machine.



                  Picture it like this



                  /dev/sda1 ntfs-bootfile
                  /dev/sda2 ntfs-win
                  /dev/sda5 ext4-root --> (YOUR LOCATION NOW)
                  /dev/sda6 ext4-swap


                  If you run rm -rf within your location, it would affect sda5 partition—in which your Ubuntu system reside. So it only affect Ubuntu.



                  Supposing you have grub boot loader to load the 2 OS (Ubuntu and Windows), if you accidentally remove GRUB file aswell, Windows would not be able to boot, but the data inside will remain intact.






                  share|improve this answer













                  It doesn't affect the windows partition, because you're running it from your Ubuntu machine.



                  Picture it like this



                  /dev/sda1 ntfs-bootfile
                  /dev/sda2 ntfs-win
                  /dev/sda5 ext4-root --> (YOUR LOCATION NOW)
                  /dev/sda6 ext4-swap


                  If you run rm -rf within your location, it would affect sda5 partition—in which your Ubuntu system reside. So it only affect Ubuntu.



                  Supposing you have grub boot loader to load the 2 OS (Ubuntu and Windows), if you accidentally remove GRUB file aswell, Windows would not be able to boot, but the data inside will remain intact.







                  share|improve this answer












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                  answered 2 hours ago









                  EmmetEmmet

                  7,73022345




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                      No it does not effect the windows partition.






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                        No it does not effect the windows partition.






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                          No it does not effect the windows partition.






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                          No it does not effect the windows partition.







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                          answered 3 hours ago









                          Wild ManWild Man

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