05-03-2015, 06:33 PM
Easiest way would be to boot from live LL or Ubuntu DVD/CD and use GParted to delete the partitions. (If deleting a Swap partition, you'll need to right-click and choose "Swapoff" first because the live disk will have mounted it for use during bootup.) I've not tried deleting Linux partitions from within Wiindows, but if it allows for that then it should work that way too I suppose.
One thing you may want to do now that you've got a working UEFI LL dual-boot is use Clonezilla to make a clone of both the EFI System Partition (ESP) and the LL Root partition as they are right now. Then if something gets broken in LL you can just restore the Root partition again. That should restore functionality (minus any added programs and configurations you've done since the cloning). In absolute emergency you could restore the ESP too, but I'd guess that wouldn't be necessary most of the time. Best bet: install any additional programs you want, perform any normal customizations you do (if any), then clone it. When restoring the clone, all of those things will be done already and the symlinks (from your other thread post) to the DATA partition should be working too.
One thing you may want to do now that you've got a working UEFI LL dual-boot is use Clonezilla to make a clone of both the EFI System Partition (ESP) and the LL Root partition as they are right now. Then if something gets broken in LL you can just restore the Root partition again. That should restore functionality (minus any added programs and configurations you've done since the cloning). In absolute emergency you could restore the ESP too, but I'd guess that wouldn't be necessary most of the time. Best bet: install any additional programs you want, perform any normal customizations you do (if any), then clone it. When restoring the clone, all of those things will be done already and the symlinks (from your other thread post) to the DATA partition should be working too.
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