HI.
i installed solaris on a x86 machine and i only partition for 4 gig when it suppose to be 8. i only using 4 gig right now how can i start using the other four. please help, thanks in advance
Meeh (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I would like to know how to make new partitions....
I currently have allocated 60G for various slices (I have totally used 4 out of 7 available slices...
I am running only solaris on my box.
My plan is to have entire disk dedicated to solaris and run other OS from within... (19 Replies)
i have one 9 gb hdd having root 2 gb fs
now i want to create additional 1gb fs in remaining space
unix partation created in entired 9gb
thanx (1 Reply)
Friends,
I have an 80 GB IDE hard disk on which I installed Solaris 10, the layout being
Total size of the partition being 30 GB
c0d0s0 = / directory = 15 GB
c0d0s1 = swap file system = 1 GB
c0d0s7 = /export/home directory = 1GB
c0d0s8= boot
c0d0s9 = alternates
... (3 Replies)
Hi. I newbie in solaris.
I have server T2000 with 2 disk on raid.
I have partitions:
Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks
0 root wm 825 - 3916 15.00GB (3092/0/0) 31464192
1 swap wu 0 - 824 4.00GB ... (6 Replies)
Hello masters,
Actually, i am user of Ubuntu, but I want to use Debian too.
I have a computer with a product key for w7 so i will use too, only for games...
The structure I have thought is the next with 1TiB of capacity.
Primary: 50 GB NTFS for W7
Extended:
Logical: 20 GB FAT32... (3 Replies)
Hi All,
My colleague says . On some boxes we have /var/,/opt are inside root and on some they are not on root they are separately. So please any one explain me what actually the difference is.
Thanks is Advance. (3 Replies)
I had a query as to what are the partitions that should be necessary in RHEL 6. My knowledge says that
1) /
2) /home
3) Swap
4) /boot
should be sufficient. But, I am seeing in my production environment which is RHEL 5 that there are partitions also for
1) /var
2) /tmp... (8 Replies)
Hello,
I'm trying to create two lpars on a machine which has 2disks. I dont want to create a vio, I just want to create two partitions and build aix on both through DVD.
Can I do this? If 'yes' how can I do it and how to create the partitions on separate disks?
Please let me know further.... (3 Replies)
Oracle Linux 6.6
To create Physical Volumes for Volume groups (LVM) , the disk need to be partitioned to LVM type ie. 'Linux LVM' type . In fdisk , this can done by choosing 8e when prompted for partition type.
Since it is easy to script (non-interactive), I use parted command rather than... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: John K
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT NETBSD
mbrlabel
MBRLABEL(8) BSD System Manager's Manual MBRLABEL(8)NAME
mbrlabel -- update disk label from MBR label(s)
SYNOPSIS
mbrlabel [-fqrw] [-s sector] device
DESCRIPTION
mbrlabel is used to update a NetBSD disk label from the Master Boot Record (MBR) label(s) found on disks that were previously used on
DOS/Windows systems (or other MBR using systems).
mbrlabel scans the MBR contained in the very first block of the disk (or the block specified through the -s flag), then walks through every
extended partition found and generates additional partition entries for the disk from the MBRs found in those extended partitions.
Each MBR partition which does not have an equivalent partition in the disk label (equivalent in having the same size and offset) is added to
the first free partition slot in the disk label. A free partition slot is defined as one with an fstype of 'unused' and a size of zero
('0'). If there are not enough free slots in the disk label, a warning will be issued.
The raw partition (typically partition c, but d on i386 and some other platforms) is left alone during this process.
By default, the proposed changed disk label will be displayed and no disk label update will occur.
Available options:
-f Force an update, even if there has been no change.
-q Performs operations in a quiet fashion.
-r In conjunction with -w, also update the on-disk label.
-s sector Specifies the logical sector number that has to be read from the disk in order to find the MBR. Useful if the disk has remapping
drivers on it and the MBR is located in a non-standard place. Defaults to 0.
-w Update the in-core label if it has been changed. See also -r.
SEE ALSO disklabel(8), dkctl(8), fdisk(8), mbr(8)HISTORY
The mbrlabel command appeared in NetBSD 1.4.
BSD April 5, 2010 BSD