On 28/09/13 16:35, Phil Dobbin wrote: > On 26/09/13 20:33, John R Pierce wrote: >> On 9/26/2013 11:30 AM, Phil Dobbin wrote: >>> I have a CentOS server (a Dell 860) with two drives in it. >>> >>> One is running CentOS 6.4 which I want to keep & the bigger 400GB drive >>> has Debian 7 on it which I want to erase & use for backups. >>> >>> Which is the best way to go about achieving my intended goal? The >>> Debian >>> drive is not mounted when Centos is booted. >> this 400GB drive is /dev/sdb ? >> >> as root... >> fdisk /dev/sdb >> and delete all partitions, create a new linux partition thats >> the full size of the disk, exit fdisk. >> mkfs.ext3 /dev/sdb1 >> mkdir /backups >> >> edit /etc/fstab and add a line to the bottom like: >> /dev/sdb1 /backups ext3 defaults 1 2 >> >> now, mount /backups >> >> voila, done. your backups will be mounted as /backups when you reboot. >> >> > Thanks to everybody for their input but I think I'll go with the > method above. The disk is virtually a virgin Debian install so no > secret or critical files are aboard & I think this should suffice. > > Thanks for your help, > > I went down the GParted route in the end. Booted from System Rescue CD & got shot of the stuff that was on there. Worked a treat. Cheers, Phil... -- currently (ab)using Arch Linux, CentOS 5.9 & 6.4, Debian Squeeze & Wheezy, Fedora Spherical & That Damn Cat, Lubuntu 12.10, OS X Snow Leopard & Tiger, Ubuntu Quantal, Raring & Saucy GnuGPG Key : http://phildobbin.org/publickey.asc _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos