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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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
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