On 06/02, da Bobstopper wrote: > does anyone know of a free software equivalent of partition magic?
GNU parted does this (according to its man page). I haven't tried it though. > > what i'm figuring is that if we want to push free software, we've got to make > it more accessible. a lot of people only want to try out linux at first, and > are put off when they find they need to go buy partition magic or whatever > to make room for linux. it would be nice to be able to say to these soon to > be linux devotees "hey, look! there's a free software equivalent to do it for > you! isn't free software grand! *nudge nudge*". Actually, those days are over. There are linux distros that will install an ext2fs loopback filesystem on a FAT partition. This way you don't modify the partition table at all, and you don't have to muck around with UMSDOS. I'm not sure what the technical consequences are of this sort of setup, but it's probably the best option for the pure newbie. > something else like norton's ghost would > also be nice... but anyway, details of any kind regarding this would be most > welcome. thanks Linux doesn't need a ghost clone. dd and tar/gzip should work pretty nicely for that sort of thing. Ghost is only necessary on windows because the copy/xcopy dos commands have some nasty implications when used with long filenames. -- Cory T. Echols [EMAIL PROTECTED]