You can also, if you have them partitioned separately, share filesystems. I
used to do that back in the day, with Slackware 2.x and RH 3.0.3. It's just
a matter of mounting the appropriate filesystem to the mount point.

You could probably still do the same with if you are using lvm, as long as
you don't get a namespace collision, e.g. both systems don't use vg00 for
the volume group name.

That said, as an earlier poster said, if you have the resources, use a
virtual machine.

--b


On Tue, Aug 3, 2010 at 7:52 AM, hadi motamedi <motamed...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Dear All
> On my debian machine, I need to install redhat on one of its partitions and
> so make it dual boot . Can you please let me know how this can be
> accomplished?
> Thank you
>
>
>

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