On Monday 28 May 2007 23:56, Randall R Schulz wrote:
# file -s /dev/sd* /dev/sda: x86 boot sector /dev/sda1: ReiserFS V3.6 block size 4096 (mounted or unclean) num blocks 73254384 r5 hash /dev/sdb: x86 boot sector, code offset 0x48 /dev/sdb1: SGI XFS filesystem data (blksz 4096, inosz 256, v2 dirs) /dev/sdb2: x86 boot sector, Microsoft Windows XP MBR /dev/sdb3: Linux/i386 swap file (new style) 1 (4K pages) size 1048240 pages /dev/sdb4: x86 boot sector, extended partition table /dev/sdc: x86 boot sector, code offset 0x48 /dev/sdc1: SGI XFS filesystem data (blksz 4096, inosz 256, v2 dirs) /dev/sdd: x86 boot sector, code offset 0x48 /dev/sdd1: SGI XFS filesystem data (blksz 4096, inosz 256, v2 dirs) /dev/sdd2: SGI XFS filesystem data (blksz 4096, inosz 256, v2 dirs) /dev/sdd3: SGI XFS filesystem data (blksz 4096, inosz 256, v2 dirs)
That is a nifty tips, Randall! I thought we usually use fdisk -l. I didn't know that. Thanks for sharing :) -- Fajar Priyanto | Reg'd Linux User #327841 | Linux tutorial http://linux2.arinet.org 7:15am up 0:53, 2.6.18.2-34-default GNU/Linux Let's use OpenOffice. http://www.openoffice.org