Hi, Setting up a low usage 'server' to handle email, files, faxing and printing using openSUSE 11.0. I have 3 HDD's and hence would like to establish RAID 5 where possible. All disks have space for both a /boot and swap partition but this was only mounted on the first drive. The three HDD's are each partitioned the same that have had the /root and /home file systems added to software RAID 5 (md0 and md1) I tried to include the /boot partition under RAID 5 and also under ) across all three drives and when I tried to add /boot to RAID it complained/agreed but then the system would not boot so hence the boot partition has not been RAID'd. I decided to just have a single partition of 23.5MB as my /boot partition on one of the drives. System has loaded fine after install and has been working 100%. The /boot partition is 23.5MB in size. The problem is that I have been catching up on updates since 11.0 was released and currently all have been successful. Only the kernel-pae update is failing due to space constraints ie the partition needs enlarging. Is it possible to use opensuse 11 software installed via YAST ie no hand compiling, to increase the size of the /boot partition, NON-DESTRUCTIVELY ie without reinstalling the whole system again? What size should I make /boot, especially as I thought it would only be accessed on system boot? Would 100MB be sufficent and can this be done NON-destructively? I have looked at the openSUSE archive but didn't find anything there, nor on Google but YMMV. I'd appreciate a pointer or three in the right direction w.r.t Linux non-restructive partitioning, if possible. Regards Hylton -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org