On Wednesday 19 January 2005 21:36, Jeff Vian wrote: >On Wed, 2005-01-19 at 17:13 -0500, Gene Heskett wrote: >> On Wednesday 19 January 2005 13:54, Les Mikesell wrote: >> >On Wed, 2005-01-19 at 11:19, Craig White wrote: >> >> --- >> >> >> >> > and 2) what it does show you is to be carved in stone, not >> >> > re-arranged willy-nilly after you've clicked on the next >> >> > button. >> >> >> >> --- >> >> it doesn't >> >> --- >> > >> >No, he's right on this one. Try creating a layout with /boot >> > first, then /, then swap, then /home where DD creates all the >> > partitions. Every time I've tried without fdisk'ing the >> > partitions first, DD re-arranges the layout into some other >> > order. That is especially stupid in the case where you try to >> > make an identical layout on the next drive and RAID1 mirror the >> > partitions, then DD moves them so they end up paired with >> > something on the same drive. FC3 has some new options for >> > mirrors so it may not be as difficult as before, but we still >> > need some way to nail down a layout in DD that will be >> > repeatable in the resulting kickstart file. >> >> And I'm down there working on it right now, having put a used 46GB >> WD drive in as /dev/hdb, and the first real problem is that DD >> will not allow me to make a /root partition, claiming it must be a >> directory on /. >> >> With all due respect, thats bullshit. I will NEVER partition a >> drive and put /root as a subdir on /. I don't have such an >> arrangment in place on any linux install I have, won't tolerate >> it. Its senseless to put your most private business as nothing >> more secure than a directory on /. End of discussion IMNSHO. >> What I do as root, is not any of the semi-public /'s business, >> none nada zip. >> >> So how do I proceed? >> >> As it exists right now, and I'm waiting for some learned answers: >> >> /dev/hdb1= primary /boot = 100M >> /dev/hdb2= primary /dos = 50M >> /dev/hdb3= primary /root = 4GB But %$#@*& DD won't let me name it >> '/root', I'm gonna have to do it by hand. >> /dev/hdb4= extended, remainder of a 46GB disk >> /dev/hdb5= extended /home = 4GB >> /dev/hdb6= extended /swap = 1GB >> /dev/hdb7= extended /var = 3GB >> /dev/hdb8= extended / rest of disk, about 33GB >> >> /dev/hda is hopefully not to be touched, this is a new install. >> >> FWIW, this time on the final release of FC3, I can get a shell >> with ctl+alt+F2, so that at least is working now. So I'm going to >> use that shell to format, install journalling, and label those >> partitions, and then see if I can get around DD and actually >> continue a fresh install on this disk. > >/root must be part of / filesystem for the install and initial boot >process. / is the first partition mounted and initially mounts ro > then after the boot gets past a certain point it then gets > remounted as rw. Since the install and normal boots proceed as root > there must be a home directory available for the boot process. > >Once the system has remounted the / filesystem in rw mode, then you > can mount an additional partition over the basic /root, but that is > your problem with /root and trying to specify that as a separate > partition during the install. Which I find a bit odd. This machine has had a seperate /root partition all its life. A df: Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/hda7 30237928 1494940 27206976 6% / /dev/hda1 247919 64356 170763 28% /boot /dev/hda2 102598 15386 87212 15% /dos /dev/hda3 4031560 828516 2998244 22% /opt /dev/hda8 69440888 35838152 30075268 55% /usr /dev/hdd2 15219872 4207420 10239324 30% /var /dev/hdd3 176100712 129174736 43347824 75% /amandatapes /dev/hda5 10079324 5500092 4067220 58% /root /dev/hda6 4031656 642596 3184264 17% /home //gene.coyote.den/public 39285760 16910336 22375424 44% /mnt/gene //gene.coyote.den/dlds 1028080 351360 676720 35% /mnt/dlds Obviously I cannot umount it to see if there is a ghost 'root' dir on /, umount claims its busy since I'm logged in as root at least twice. If what you are saying is true though, I should be able to comment that mount out of my fstab, reboot and check. Interesting line of reasoning. All I can say is that I do not have a machine here whose /root isn't on its own partition. I might try that when I'm awake again. -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) 99.32% setiathome rank, not too shabby for a WV hillbilly Yahoo.com attorneys please note, additions to this message by Gene Heskett are: Copyright 2005 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.