On Wednesday 03 March 2010, Jatin K wrote: >Dear *, > >I've facing one problem ( doing partitioning practice on 10GB IDE >hard-disk ) > >I'm trying to create following partition layout > >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- >----------- device size mount-point >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- >----------- hda1 100mb /boot > >hda2 500mb swap > >hda3 5000mb / > >hda4 4500mb Extended partition > >hda5 500mb /var > >hda6 1000mb /var/www > >hda7 2000mb /home > >hda8 1000mb /usr >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- >-------------- > >I've done this on disk druid > >licked on new ---> mount point */boot *filesystem type ext3 100MB ( >fixed sized is selected ) and it becomes hda1 > >again licked on new ----> filesystem type Swap 500MB ( fixed sized is >selected ) and it becomes hda2 ... > >now creating / ( root ) partition > >again clicked on new ---> mount point */* filesystem type ext3 5000mb ( >fixed sized is selected ) ... now something happens as soon as I press ok > >the swap partition is sifted to hda3 (previously it was on hda2 ) and / >partition goes to hda2 > >if I go ahead with this and create other partition / goes to hda5 > > >why like this ???? > >how do I exactly maintain the said order of the partition in exercise ?? > Simple, don't use disk destroyer, its busted. I had a heck of a time when I installed F10, and f10 was slow as a drugged 3 legged dog. Stable for the most part but slow. The I started getting problem reports from smartd about that disk. So I went and got another disk, and used gparted to prepare it as I wanted it to be, with a few more partitions etc with the sizing based on previous experience. I labeled them all, put ext3 journals on them, and rsync'ed them from the failing disk, and did a grub install on the new disk and fixed /etc/fstab to use label mounts as the last thing I did before a shutdown to remove the failing disk and move the new one to the sata0 jack. I had to do a boot from the install dvd in rescue mode and do the grub install again for some reason. But when I had rebooted from the dvd to the new disk, the first thing I noticed was a very obviously noticeable speedup of the system even from the boot verbosity, and now, nearly a year later, that speedup remains. But its blasphemous to pan disk destroyer in these here parts, so I keep quiet about it most of the time. -- Cheers, Gene "There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order." -Ed Howdershelt (Author) "The Computer made me do it." -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines