on Thu, 02 Jan 2003 07:56:36AM +0000, Karsten M. Self insinuated: > on Thu, Jan 02, 2003 at 02:24:40AM -0500, Nori Heikkinen ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) >wrote: > > so, i did it! i installed debian from scratch, woo-hoo! it's now > > installed, but not configured, so i still have half the work ahead > > of me ... but thanks to y'all and to debian, it was much easier > > than i'd expected it to be. > > > > now my question is: during setup and installation, i partitioned > > off my hard drive into a swap partition /, /usr, /var, /tmp, and > > /home. i initialized the swap and the first three of the others, > > but then i stopped, and moved on to the rest of the installation. > > now i don't have /tmp or /home initialized or mounted. how do i > > go back and do this? > > 1. Create the partition (you've done this apparently). > > 2. Create a filesystem on it. E.g.: if /dev/hda6 is /home: > > mke2fs /dev/hda6 > > 3. Add an entry to /etc/fstab. > > 4. Mount the filesystem.
perfect, that works like a charm. google hadn't been any help on this one ... guess i'd just been phrasing my question wrong. thanks! > > what's weirding me out is, having created a user account for > > myself and logging in, `pwd` says i'm in /home/nori. how can this > > be, if i didn't initialize a /home partition? > > You don't need to create a partition for given mountpoints, you > *can* do so if you like. /home/nori is probably on your root > partition (/). You can check this with: > > $ cd /home/nori; df . yup, that's exactly what it was. > > i mean, i'm going to go back and initialize it and /tmp just as > > soon as i figure out how, but i'm kind of confused. > > You're doing fine. The confusion is permanent, its focus shifts > with time. :) so i'm seeing. thanks! </nori> -- .~. nori @ sccs.swarthmore.edu /V\ http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/~nori/jnl/ // \\ @ maenad.net /( )\ www.maenad.net ^`~'^ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]