On Tue, 16 Mar 2010 17:12:49 -0400 (EDT), Aioanei Rares wrote: > > Hi all, I have a HDD (the only one, in fact) with the following layout , > as reported by df : > > /dev/sda2 99G 886M 93G 1% / > /dev/sda1 2.0G 170M 1.8G 9% /boot > /dev/sda5 345G 232G 96G 71% /home > /dev/sda8 29G 172M 27G 1% /tmp > /dev/sda6 59G 5.2G 54G 9% /usr > /dev/sda7 20G 3.1G 17G 16% /var > > Now, at the end, I have some 137 GB unpartitioned/unformatted. How can I > use this free space, since gparted ran from a LiveCD tells me that I > need to make a logical partition (which is /dev/sda4) in order to create > partitions anew in that free space. It's probably lack of sleep, but > please help me out here. :)
I may not be the brightest bulb on the shelf, but there's something I don't understand here. If I understand the traditional MS-DOS disk partitioning scheme correctly, partition numbers 1-4 are reserved for primary or extended partitions. A minimum of 0, maximum of 1 extended partitions is allowed, a minimum of 0, maximum of 4 primary partitions is allowed, and the total of primary + extended partitions is minimum of 0, maximum of 4. This information is stored in the master boot record. Logical partitions are subdivisions of the extended partition, starting with partition numbers 5 and up. The information on logical partitions is stored in the boot sector for the extended partition. OK, so with that said, you obviously already have an extended partition, since you have logical partitions defined (partition numbers 5 and higher). You have two partitions numbered in the range 1-4 (1 and 2, to be specific). I'm guessing that 1 is a primary and 2 is the extended. Now, how could you create a new logical partition called /dev/sda4? That's not possible, according to my understanding. The next logical partition will be /dev/sda9. You can still create up to two more primary partitions, providing the space is available outside the extended partition, and these would have names /dev/sda3 and /dev/sda4, respectively. But there's no way you can create a new logical partition called /dev/sda4. After resolving this inconsistency, I still really don't understand your question. What you literally asked is, "How can I use this free space"? The answer is to create another partition, the same way you used the rest of the space. What's the problem with that? What exactly is it that you are trying to accomplish, and what is the obstacle to accomplishing it? Please be more specific. -- .''`. Stephen Powell <zlinux...@wowway.com> : :' : `. `'` `- -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1027918179.19743201268832036406.javamail.r...@md01.wow.synacor.com