What an enabling piece of information! Got a huge /home partition now.
Thanks - icebiker
- Original Message -
From: "Mark Lanett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, October 20, 2004 14:26
Subject: Re: Formatting an unused partition
:: I
On Wednesday 20 October 2004 13:43, [KS] wrote:
> All right, thats done. I used the following command:
> $ mkfs.ext3 -v /dev/hdb10
>
> mkfs wrote the inodes, made the journal, etc. and I
> could see the type as ext3 when I checked /dev/hdb
> with cfdisk.
>
> My next question is, how to allow users
All right, thats done. I used the following command:
$ mkfs.ext3 -v /dev/hdb10
mkfs wrote the inodes, made the journal, etc. and I
could see the type as ext3 when I checked /dev/hdb
with cfdisk.
My next question is, how to allow users to write to
the partition. Current permissions are drwxr_xr_x
:: Is it safe to mkfs on a disk that already has active, used
:: partitions?
Totally safe.
Check your typing twice, format once.
~mark
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OTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 19, 2004 19:14
Subject: RE: Formatting an unused partition
Then if you are confident its unused make a new filesystem, mount it and use
it.
regards
Steven
-Original Message-
From: [KS] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: W
On Tuesday 19 October 2004 17:50, [KS] wrote:
> In trying to find out how to do that, here is one way
> I can think of:
>
> mkfs -v -t ext3 /dev/hdb10
>
> Any other suggestions?
>
> /KS
>
Well, if you want a ReiserFS file system, install the package progsreiserfs
and use the mkfs.reiserfs command.
> partion and use it? I did read about cfdisk but I just
> want to make sure that I'm doing the right thing as it
> is being done as root.
Be sure to reboot the system after using cfdisk to modify
the partition table and using mkfs to make the filesystem
on it. Despite the message cfdisk produces
In trying to find out how to do that, here is one way
I can think of:
mkfs -v -t ext3 /dev/hdb10
Any other suggestions?
/KS
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Then if you are confident its unused make a new filesystem, mount it and use it.
regards
Steven
-Original Message-
From: [KS] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 20 October 2004 11:49 a.m.
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Formatting an unused partition
I'm top posting(to
point if you are confident its unused you can
> make a file system on it. If not mount it and go see
> if amything is in it.
>
> regards
>
> Steven
>
> -Original Message-
> From: [KS]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, 20 October 2004 10:24 a
I am assuming you have no software raid devices like md0 etc as this would hide hdb10
regards
Steven
-Original Message-
From: Steven Jones
Sent: Wednesday, 20 October 2004 11:12 a.m.
To: [KS]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Formatting an unused partition
Do a df -h and look for hdb10
: [KS] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, 20 October 2004 10:24 a.m.
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Formatting an unused partition
Bonjour tous,
I have two HDDs (40+80G). The smaller one (/dev/hda)
has WinXP on it(hardly used), and bigger one
(/dev/hdb) has Debian Sid installed. I was
Bonjour tous,
I have two HDDs (40+80G). The smaller one (/dev/hda)
has WinXP on it(hardly used), and bigger one
(/dev/hdb) has Debian Sid installed. I was checking
free space on /dev/hdb and by chance summed up all the
partition sizes. I was surprised to see that the sum
was considerably less than
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