hi,
1) is logical partition the same as physical partition except that one is physical and the other is logical?
2) then it must a one to one ratio? (3 Replies)
I've created a partition with GNU Parted, how do I mount the partition?
The manual information at http://www.gnu.org/software/parted/manual/parted.html is good, but I am sure about how I mount the partition afterwards.
Thanks,
--Todd (1 Reply)
Hi all
i got this filesystem
Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on
/dev/dsk/c0t600A0B80001F350A000033404A5D29D9d0s2
492G 64M 487G 1% /u10
How do i change the name for /dev/dsk/c0t600A0B80001F350A000033404A5D29D9d0s2 to the... (3 Replies)
Gentleman,
Please move if I have chose the incorrect forum section. I am trying to move data that is not backed up from partition 1 to partition 2 on a SAN that has a GFS2 filesystem. Since the data is not backed up I am rsyncing this data and once verified I will delete from the source... (6 Replies)
Hi folks,
is there any possibility how to rename soft partitions??
Here I found that this is not possible (I know that it is) but I need do it in some supported way.
http://dlc.sun.com/osol/docs/content/LOGVOLMGRADMIN/tasks-basics-5.html
This is production system it is why I need do it... (0 Replies)
hi all
while formatting hard disk i am getting following error.
Partition 1 ends at 266338338
It must be between 34 and 143374704.
label error: EFI Labels do not support overlapping partitions
Partition 8 overlaps partition 1.
Warning: error writing EFI.
Label failed.
I have formatted the... (2 Replies)
Hi Experts
I would like to know different between soft partition concept and hard partition concept on solaris.
Here is little explanation between soft partition concept and hard partition concept on solaris.
Soft Partition:
1TB total space available in storage in all mapped to the OS to... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I have a Red Hat Linux 5.9 Server installed with one hard disk & 2 Partitions created on it as follows,
/boot - Linux Partition & another is
LVM - One VG & under that 5-6 Logical volumes(var,opt,home etc).
Here my requirement is to take out 1GB of space from LVM ( Any logical... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gr8_usk
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
rmmod
RMMOD(8)RMMOD(8)NAME
rmmod - simple program to remove a module from the Linux Kernel
SYNOPSIS
rmmod [ -f ] [ -w ] [ -s ] [ -v ] [ modulename ]
DESCRIPTION
rmmod is a trivial program to remove a module (when module unloading support is provided) from the kernel. Most users will want to use
modprobe(8) with the -r option instead.
OPTIONS -v --verbose
Print messages about what the program is doing. Usually rmmod prints messages only if something goes wrong.
-f --force
This option can be extremely dangerous: it has no effect unless CONFIG_MODULE_FORCE_UNLOAD was set when the kernel was compiled.
With this option, you can remove modules which are being used, or which are not designed to be removed, or have been marked as
unsafe (see lsmod(8)).
-w --wait
Normally, rmmod will refuse to unload modules which are in use. With this option, rmmod will isolate the module, and wait until the
module is no longer used. Nothing new will be able to use the module, but it's up to you to make sure the current users eventually
finish with it. See lsmod(8)) for information on usage counts.
-s --syslog
Send errors to syslog instead of standard error.
-V --version
Show version of program and exit.
COPYRIGHT
This manual page originally Copyright 2002, Rusty Russell, IBM Corporation. Maintained by Jon Masters and others.
SEE ALSO modprobe(8), insmod(8), lsmod(8)modinfo(8)
2010-03-01 RMMOD(8)