on Thu, Jul 31, 2003 at 08:44:12PM -0700, Mike Hunt ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hi all,
I had recently tried to install Debian on a computer containing a 200 GB harddrive. However, during cfdisking of the Debian install process cfdisk fails to see past approximately 130 GB of hard disk space. I'm suspecting this is because it is an old version of cfdisk (later versions of cfdisk seem to see the whole drive). So, does anyone here know how to work around this problem so I can use all of my hard disk space with Debian? Thanks for your help!
Please set your mailer/editor linewrap to 68-75 characters. I strongly recommend 72 as a good default.
Thank you.
See the Large Disk HOWTO. There's a history of successivly larger disk sizes which require different mechanisms for handling what was initially a 528 MiB limit for HD sizes.
I have a similar problem so I read the large disk howto (again) but it's pretty much irrelevant today...
For disks beyond 137 GiB, the HOWTO doesn't provide specific guidance, though a good overview is here, in general, you want 2.4.18 or better kernels:
http://www.nber.org/sys-admin/maxtor-160.html
in addition to that: I have SATA disk (250GB), seen as scsi device (kernel scsi ata configuration option enabled), for which you need at least 2.4.21-ac4, most tools see the whole disk but can't read above 137GB, here's the latest from lkml:
from [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I just realized, 2.4 kernels don't support scsi's READ_CAPACITY_16,> nor 64-bit sector_t on a 32-bit processor.
> limitation may disappear there.
Can you test Alan Cox's 2.6.0-test-ac tree? I bet the 137GB
Jeff
I didn't try it yet so I don't know whether it's going to work...
erik
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