Hello Suse People, Doing a fresh install of 8.2 over 8.0. (Personal) Want to change some of my partitions around some. No size changes. Have some questions at the partitioning screen. I am somewhat familiar with hard drive partioning. The drive is hdb. ( 30 gigs) This was the 8.0 setup. hdb1 = /, hdb2 =extended, hdb3 =/usr, hdb5 =/newlinux, hdb6 =swap, hdb7=fat32, hdb8 =/data. Now at the partioning screen Yast suggests/has added another logical partion, hdb9 =/ which is 1.9 gigs. Don't know where it got it from and is scheduled to be formatted. NONE... of the other drives, regular or logical will be formatted. Don't understand this because hdb1 was the original / . Does this mean that all of the old boot stuff from / will remain? Will hdb3 =usr remain?? ( can't be ! ) The reason for the repartitioning is that I would like to create a /home partition I do NOT want Yast to touch /newlinux or /data but would like to change them from ext2 to ext3. Would that cause data loss with that change? I am thinking accept hdb9 =/ as suggested by Yast even though it is only 1.9 gigs,( worry about var, opt, etc.) and then format the original hdb1 from / to /home. Or, would it be better to format the original hdb1 and reuse it? ( 4.5 gigs) Then use the newfound hdb9 for something else. I would like my /home partition to be bigger than 1.9 gigs though. PLEASE !! Correct my thinking if I am wrong! I could also create an LVM / LVM's? But I have no idea about that. Can anyone direct me to the "Administration Guide" Hope that some partitioning guru will give me some advice here. Bob S.
The 03.06.06 at 02:20, Bob S. wrote:
Now at the partioning screen Yast suggests/has added another logical partion, hdb9 =/ which is 1.9 gigs. Don't know where it got it from and is scheduled to be formatted. NONE... of the other drives, regular or logical will be formatted. Don't understand this because hdb1 was the original / . Does this mean that all of the old boot stuff from / will remain? Will hdb3 =usr remain?? ( can't be ! )
You have to go into manual or expert mode, and select the partitions you want it to use and/or create. The automated mode is just installing a new system on a new partition. -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson
On Fri, 6 Jun 2003 02:20:52 -0400
"Bob S."
Hello Suse People,
Doing a fresh install of 8.2 over 8.0. (Personal) Want to change some of my partitions around some. No size changes. Have some questions at the partitioning screen. I am somewhat familiar with hard drive partioning.
The drive is hdb. ( 30 gigs) This was the 8.0 setup. hdb1 = /, hdb2 =extended, hdb3 =/usr, hdb5 =/newlinux, hdb6 =swap, hdb7=fat32, hdb8 =/data.
Now at the partioning screen Yast suggests/has added another logical partion, hdb9 =/ which is 1.9 gigs. Don't know where it got it from and is scheduled to be formatted. NONE... of the other drives, regular or logical will be formatted. Don't understand this because hdb1 was the original / . Does this mean that all of the old boot stuff from / will remain? Will hdb3 =usr remain?? ( can't be ! )
The reason for the repartitioning is that I would like to create a /home partition
I do NOT want Yast to touch /newlinux or /data but would like to change them from ext2 to ext3. Would that cause data loss with that change?
I am thinking accept hdb9 =/ as suggested by Yast even though it is only 1.9 gigs,( worry about var, opt, etc.) and then format the original hdb1 from / to /home.
Or, would it be better to format the original hdb1 and reuse it? ( 4.5
gigs) Then use the newfound hdb9 for something else. I would like my /home partition to be bigger than 1.9 gigs though.
PLEASE !! Correct my thinking if I am wrong!
I could also create an LVM / LVM's? But I have no idea about that. Can anyone direct me to the "Administration Guide"
Hope that some partitioning guru will give me some advice here. YaST will not touch your /newlinux or /data filesystems as long as you do not mark them as format.
Then after you install and everything is working, then convert any
existing ext2 filesystem to ext3. Here are the steps (make sure you look
at the man page for tune2fs).
1. unmount the affected filesystems.
2. Use tune2fs with the -j option to convert to ext3.
3. update the fstab to reflect that these are ext3 filesystems.
Then, the next time you mount those, they will come up as ext3.
I'm going to avoid LVM because that is more involved.
WRT:/hdb3=/usr.
When you upgrade from one release to another, the new system files are
updated. This includes /usr. Assuming you do a clean install, you should
have the /usr file system formatted. If you are doing an upgrade
install, that is not necessary.
--
Jerry Feldman
On Saturday 07 June 2003 08:54, Jerry Feldman wrote:
On Fri, 6 Jun 2003 02:20:52 -0400
"Bob S."
wrote: Hello Suse People,
Doing a fresh install of 8.2 over 8.0. (Personal) Want to change some of my partitions around some. No size changes. Have some questions at the partitioning screen. I am somewhat familiar with hard drive partioning.
..............<snip some stuff>...........
Now at the partioning screen Yast suggests/has added another logical partion, hdb9 =/ which is 1.9 gigs. Don't know where it got it from and is scheduled to be formatted.
Yast states, NONE... of the other drives, regular or logical will be formatted. Don't understand this because hdb1 was the original / . Does this mean that all of the old boot stuff from / will remain? because of
Important and source of confusion... the new hdb9 designated as / ???
The reason for the repartitioning is that I would like to create a /home partition
...........<snip more....answered in this message>...........
I am thinking accept hdb9 =/ as suggested by Yast even though it is only 1.9 gigs,( worry about var, opt, etc.) and then format the original hdb1 from / to /home.
Or, would it be better to format the original hdb1 and reuse it? ( 4.5 gigs) Then use the newfound hdb9 for something else.
................<snip more>.............
I could also create an LVM / LVM's? But I have no idea about that. Can anyone direct me to the "Administration Guide"
I'm going to avoid LVM because that is more involved.
:-(
Hope that some partitioning guru will give me some advice here.
YaST will not touch your /newlinux or /data filesystems as long as you do not mark them as format.
Then after you install and everything is working, then convert any existing ext2 filesystem to ext3. Here are the steps ..<snip>.....
OK, understood. Thank you for that. Please explain to me though, when Yast says it will not format the original hdb1 which was / and suggests a new / partition at hdb9. That is the big thing that confuses me. What happens to the original hdb1 =/ ? Do I end up with an old and a new / partition??
WRT:/hdb3=/usr.
When you upgrade from one release to another, the new system files are updated. This includes /usr. Assuming you do a clean install, you should have the /usr file system formatted.
OK, that is also understood,except that Yast said it was not going to format hdb3 =/usr. What you have stated is logical and is what should happen. I guess there is a difference between overwrite and format? which is not clear to me? But, going back to the old hdb1 =/. Yast states it will not be formatted. Why is it not overwritten like /usr? and used for / instead of creating a new hdb9 for / ???? Thanks for answering some of this. Hope you or someone else can answer the rest. Bob S.
The 03.06.08 at 01:41, Bob S. wrote:
OK, understood. Thank you for that. Please explain to me though, when Yast says it will not format the original hdb1 which was / and suggests a new / partition at hdb9. That is the big thing that confuses me. What happens to the original hdb1 =/ ?
Nothing :-)
Do I end up with an old and a new / partition??
Yes. Yast is assuming you want to keep both. That's the method I used to have on this machine a small SuSE 7.3 install I use for emergencies or tests, and the big 8.1 system. But of course, both have only one "/" and the other is accessed as "/data" or "/theother" (for example), or not at all.
OK, that is also understood,except that Yast said it was not going to format hdb3 =/usr. What you have stated is logical and is what should happen. I guess there is a difference between overwrite and format? which is not clear to me?
Yes. Format is a format, everything is erased, nothing remains. Overwritten, things of the same name are overwritten, old things with names not matching anything of the new install remains intact. Not recommended unless you have some reason for it and you know what you are doing.
But, going back to the old hdb1 =/. Yast states it will not be formatted. Why is it not overwritten like /usr? and used for / instead of creating a new hdb9 for / ????
You will have to ask the developers of Yast why the make the automatic choices they make :-) If it has a new "/", the old one is not touched. If the old "/usr" has the mount point filled as "/usr" it has to either format or overwrite it, no other option is possible. -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson
participants (3)
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Bob S.
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Carlos E. R.
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Jerry Feldman