Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers How Much Space Before 1st Partition? Post 302926443 by Corona688 on Monday 24th of November 2014 12:40:22 PM
Old 11-24-2014
Copying the MBR could mess up the partition table anyway. What exactly are you trying to do? Would a complete duplicate of your original be good enough?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Swap Partition Space

first of all, sorry about my english...I´m a spanish newbie to this marvelous OS and i have just a couple of doubts...u know? :-) 1) how big should my swap partition be if i installed debian 2.2r3 or FreeBSD 4.x on a AMD k7 1400Mhz with 512Mb of Random Access Memory? i heard that those OS... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: I[X]ION
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

moving space from one partition to another

How can I move some space allocated to one partition to another, i.e. from "/var" to "/" . Thanks! (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jason6792
4 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Disk space for root partition

Hello, I am trying to monitor disk space for each node on the machine. I am able to get all individual nodes but for the '/' node. For example: df -k: bash-2.05b# df -k Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on /dev/xxx 4127108 2415340 1502120 62% / /dev/yyy ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: chiru_h
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Best ways of increasing space on a partition

Hi, On one of our solaris servers, the root partition has filled up,(it was poorly sized in the first place), Does anyone have any advice about the best way to add space to a partition. I'm sure I've read how to do this somewhere before but just can't remember...:( A colleague has suggested... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kenny123m
1 Replies

5. Red Hat

RHEL 5 supports only 2 TB space for a partition !

Dear Friends , I am using Redhat Ent Linux 5.0 with a EMC storage which HDD space is 4 TB. After Installing RHEL 5 , I get 4 TB space available but when I am going to create a partition then the OS show 2TB available space . I cannot create a partition above 2TB space . Is there any limitation... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shipon_97
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

shifting space from one partition to other

hi My System is Sun Microsystems Inc. SunOS 5.10 Solaris Partition Info is /dev/vx/dsk/bootdg/var 27G 25G 1.2G 96% /var /dev/vx/dsk/bootdg/oravol 110G 54G 56G 49% /export/home I want to shift space 20G from /export/home to /var What should be the command ?? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: kaushik02018
2 Replies

7. Slackware

Ideal partition sizes of 17 gb space.

I am planning to install slack 13.37 on an old stand-alone PIII (512 mb ram) with 17 gb disk space. I need to keep lotsa pdf, chm type e-books for programming with few other misc. documents. I'm going to use this system for my personal use. It has no network but I browse internet with cable... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: vectrum
0 Replies

8. Linux

How to increase root space from another partition?

Hi OS Experts I would like to increase root partition from another partition so that I can save more documents in Home and Desktop. whether it is possible without formating root partition if so please explain here is o/p of df -h Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/sda9... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Akshay Hegde
8 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to consume all available space on partition?

Hi I'm doing some resilience testing and need to write a script to consume all of the available disk space on a partition and then to free it up again. This would need to be - Safe Dynamic, in that it calculates the free space prior to consuming it. I might want to go on to consume a... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbq
7 Replies

10. Red Hat

Allot free space from one partition to other

I have a RHEL 5.3 machine with the following partitions and free space: Free space on the partitions / : 74GB /boot : 81MB /var : 73GB /home : 37GB /icat : 758MB /opt : 1.5GB Now is it possible to allot a free space of some other partitions to /opt? I want around 100 GB more space... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: omniok
4 Replies
PART(8) 						      System Manager's Manual							   PART(8)

NAME
part - partition table editor SYNOPSIS
part [device] ... DESCRIPTION
Part is a screen oriented partition table editor. While editing you will see six lines of numbers, the first line shows the device name and its geometry (number of cylinders, heads and sec- tors), the second shows the start and end of the drive or partition you are working on, the last four lines show the different partitions or subpartitions. All numbers except those on the second line can be edited. Question marks are showed instead of numbers if the parti- tion table is not loaded yet. You have to select a device and type 'r'. Editing is a simple matter of moving around with the arrow keys and changing the values with + and - (or PgUp and PgDn), or by typing the desired value. The '?' key will give a small list of commands, the '!' key gives advice on how to make a new entry. The spacebar toggles between showing the size of the partition and the last sector on the partition. Useful to check if a partition is adjacent to the next. The 'm' key is "magical", it lets you cycle through a set of interesting values for the base or size of a partition. These values are: Aligned to a cylinder, taped to other partitions (inside or outside), or filling out holes. Use this key! Minix subpartition tables or extended partitions may be edited after hitting the '>' key. The number of this partition will be shown after the device name on the second row, e.g. /dev/hd0:2. Minix subpartition tables are shown as is, but extended partition bases are trans- lated to absolute offsets on the screen to hide the gory details of their implementation from the innocent user. (Hit 'p' if you dare.) The '<' key will bring you back to the enclosing partition table. With arguments, part will use the given devices or files. Without arguments, part will use all interesting block devices in /dev sorted by device number and starting with /dev/hd0. Values that are out of range, overlapping, or otherwise strange are shown in reverse video. Values that may possibly be a problem for operating systems other then Minix are shown in bold characters. The name of the device is highlighted when it has not been read yet. Head or sector numbers are highlighted if the partition does not start or end at a cylinder boundary. The base and/or size field is highlighted if they fall outside the device, if they are inside some other partition, if the base equals the device's base (no room for the boot sector), or if the size is zero. Part complies with the good old UNIX tradition of trusting the user. It will write any table, no matter how bad. You have been warned. By the way, as far as Minix is concerned there is absolutely no reason to make partitions start precisely on a cylinder or track nor does it have to be an exact number of cylinders long. Minix only looks at the base and size of a partition, the geometry of the drive doesn't have to be correct. Other Operating systems can be very picky about partitions that are not aligned. Some partition editors may refuse to edit a table, others may even make a mess of the table. The only exception is the first partition, it traditionally starts on the first track, not the first cylinder. All editors must understand this. (Subpartition tables are Minix specific, so there is no reason at all for any alignment.) Extended Partitions Extended partitions are a mess that is only made slightly better by part by translating the base offsets to absolute numbers. It is better to use DOS fdisk to create them, but if you insist on using part then this is what they should look like: The extended partition entry in the primary partition table must cover the whole logical partition space within it. The area thus created is split in segments, each segment contains a partition table in sector 0 and one (just one) logical parti- tion. The first entry of a segment's partition table describes this logical partition: it's partition ID, base and size. The second entry is an extended partition that describes base and size of the next segment (partition table and logical partition). The last segment's partition table is empty, or contains one logical partition. SEE ALSO
fd(4), hd(4). BUGS
You can have a table read, messed up, and written in no time, be careful. You can't type head or sector numbers directly. Sectors are counted from 0 for consistency, but the partition table counts from 1 like DOS addresses them. Most confusing. You can't write a backup copy to a file, that's what dd(1) with count=1 is for. AUTHOR
Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) PART(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 06:06 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy