On Tue, 9 Nov 1999, Micha Feigin wrote: michf >i was wondering whats the larjest partition size that linux can deel with michf >(and if there is still limitation on the size of the root (boot) partition
slink is easily able to handle a 9gig drive, i recently installed it on a 10.1gig ibm drive and it went flawlessly. now that doesn't mean that your motherboard/bios can handle it properly. if its a fairly new board, then you shouldn't have a problem, but i think its good practice to make sure i got the latest bios. the 8GB barrier is all that may be of concern in this case.. michf >I am looking for advice on how to best partition the disk to allow for michf >flexability when I need to change configurations/add programs. i would do something like this .. 1 500MB C: (FAT16) Primary, use boot manager of choice(i highly reccomend system commander) 1 128MB Linux Swap Primary, 1 5GB Linux EXT2 Primary, the rest an extended partition formatted FAT32. keep the boot portion of the disk at the start(fastest) swap next(next fastest) linux next ..windows last. michf >I have a 1 GB disk now so i don't have experiance with large disks. michf >Also, is the a way to give windows access (rw) to a linux partition, so i michf >can share the user partition betwin systems (I prefer to make it a linux michf >partition with access to windows and not the other way around). yes and no, there are some utils out there to allow read only access to a EXT2 partition, some with experimental RW access, but mouting foreign file systems should always be done read only, in cases where the driver is not really well tested. mounting FAT16/FAT32 drives is quite safe in linux 2.0/2.2 and can be mounted RW. To access EXT2 drives from Win9x look into this program: http://www.yipton.demon.co.uk/ i tested it a few times, it runs *ok* but is VERY VERY SLOW (at the time, it was about a year since i tried it) michf >If not, how do I mount a windows partiton with write permision to regular michf >users? (or a specific user), and is it posible to use a windows partition michf >as the home directory for a user? you can, but i dont reccomend it. File permissions are not available on FAT16/FAT32 file systems. so you'd have no security, anyone could read/write/delete anything. you could use the UMSDOS file system, which would give experimental support for permissions on a FAT16/32 drive but i wouldnt reccomend that either. nate ----------------------------------------[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ]-- Vice President Network Operations http://www.firetrail.com/ Firetrail Internet Services Limited http://www.aphroland.org/ Everett, WA 425-348-7336 http://www.linuxpowered.net/ Powered By: http://comedy.aphroland.org/ Debian 2.1 Linux 2.0.36 SMP http://yahoo.aphroland.org/ -----------------------------------------[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] ]-- 10:31am up 81 days, 22:01, 1 user, load average: 1.84, 1.68, 1.64