What is the default formatting for linux? In cfdisk part3 is reiserfs,
part 1 & 2 are just listed as Linux?
I guess ext2 is the default filesystem for Linux, but most distros use ext3 by defaut nowadays and the best to use is... very debatable. :-D
Dusty
]]> Dusty I tried /boot, boot, and /dev/discs/disc0/Part1/boot.
What would happen is that when the formatting was applied reiserfs at
Part 3 always failed? Obviously Swap was skipped.
I just finished installing gentoo, I thought most systems were pretty
much the same. While techanically they might be, the user interface
and file procedures are different. gentoo does not have the eth0 setup
in rc.conf, but in conf.d/net(I think).
What is the default formatting for linux? In cfdisk part3 is reiserfs,
part 1 & 2 are just listed as Linux?
Thanks -- Larry
]]>The program does ask if you would like to mount
another partition, I choose Part1, choose ext2, and then it asks where
to mount it. I get a window with /home. I remove home and type
/dev/discs/disc0/part1. This does seem to work, but is it necessary,
or what is the correct procedure?
I think you should remove home and change it to /boot. The /dev/discs/disc0/part1 was autoselected when you chose Part1, ext2, was it not?
Dusty
]]>normally you just have to set the boot flag in cfdisk...
you dont have to choose like you do with your swap and your root, just set the boot flag and leave it allone...
I partition my hd into 3 parts, part1 - 32mb for boot, part2 - 1gb for
swap, and part3 - 7gb for root, then write it to disc.
I then go to the next step, in install and it starts asking me where I
want my swap partition. Fine, then root, where and what type of
filesystem, again, fine.
The questions I have are with boot. I made a boot partition in
cfdisk, but I still have to mount it, do I not???? The installer
asks for swap, root, but not boot! Now, this is where I might be
screwing up! The program does ask if you would like to mount
another partition, I choose Part1, choose ext2, and then it asks where
to mount it. I get a window with /home. I remove home and type
/dev/discs/disc0/part1. This does seem to work, but is it necessary,
or what is the correct procedure?
The problem is that when I edit /etc/fstab I get:
/dev/discs/disc0/Part1/dev/discs/disc0/Part1. I remove the extra dev
line and type in boot and everything seems to work OK. When I first
started I didn't know what I was doing, and this seemed to work.
Would somebody please explain the correct procedure???
Thank You -- Larry
]]>