JB <jb.1234abcd <at> gmail.com> writes: > ... > # fdisk -l /dev/sda > ... > Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System > /dev/sda1 63 81920159 40960048+ 7 HPFS/NTFS > /dev/sda2 * 81920160 111222719 14651280 a5 FreeBSD > /dev/sda3 111222720 140525279 14651280 83 Linux > /dev/sda4 140525280 246017519 52746120 5 Extended > /dev/sda5 140525343 146391839 2933248+ 82 Linux swap / Solaris > /dev/sda6 146391903 158109839 5858968+ 83 Linux > /dev/sda7 158109903 187412399 14651248+ 83 Linux > /dev/sda8 187412463 216714959 14651248+ 83 Linux > /dev/sda9 216715023 246017519 14651248+ 83 Linux > > # dmesg | grep bsd > [ 1.550749] sda2: <bsd: sda10 sda11 sda12 sda13 sda14 > > ... > # mount -t ufs -o ro,ufstype=ufs2 /dev/sda10 /media > > # df > Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on > /dev/sda7 14420896 7414168 5541604 58% / > tmpfs 1025992 448 1025544 1% /dev/shm > /dev/sda10 494766 221560 233638 49% /media > > ... To continue ... The device label /dev/sda10 is real and mounted (it is the FreeBSD "a" slice). I could have put it in /etc/fstab to be boot auto mounted, I guess. Now, what is going to happen if I need a new Linux partition ? According to 'fdisk -l /dev/sda' anything after /dev/sda9 is for grabs. So ... can I take /dev/sda10 ? Or should it be /dev/sda15 (after FreeBSD slices /dev/sda10 thru /dev/sda14) ? JB -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines