Thanks.
>
> Note.
> You cannot move the start point of any partition.
> You can join two or more partitions to make one larger partition, but
> you can only do this and retain the (physically) first of the partitions.
>
It's possible to have dual boot, like Fedora + Windows. Is it not possible
to have a dual boot, like FC6 and F8 ?
For LV - there is resize2fs, and lvreduce commands.
In this case, disk would be expensive. There is a Raid Array Controller, and
Fedora uses:
Fusion MPT base driver 3.04.04
Copyright (c) 1999-2007 LSI Logic Corporation
It would be nice to have it split up, so you could run test versions.
//ARNE
John Summerfield <debian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Arne Chr. Jorgensen wrote:
> hi,
>
> What would be a smart way to partition a disk ?
>
> I have Fedora core 6 installed, but would like to test F8 and have it as a separate partition However - I had used the entire disk, and I have not found
> any way to resize the partition. Have tried "resize2fs" - but it says "online resizing required". What does that mean ?
It does?
ext3 supports online resizing, but I think only for growing.
>
> I have tried different suggestions I have found regarding Logical volumes,
> but have not found anything that work.
>
> I am attempting to save some data, and may do a clean install again, but
> it no longer seem like a good idea to have all space given to a single volume ? Any tip on this subject ?
New disks are cheap. Adding a second disk is a safe way to accomplish
what you want.
I have not resized LVM, but I have done with with straight ext2/ext3
partitions. In fact, I can't see any advantage to me in using LVM.
Tbe procedure, some years ago, for making ext2/2 smaller was something
like this. You do not have any partitions on the disk mounted.
0. Backup.
1. e2fsck -f
2. resize2fs to a new size. I suggest smaller than your target.
3. delete the partition.
4. Create the partition. Check very carefully that your new partition is
at least as large as you resized to.
5 resize2fs to the partition size. If your partition is smaller than
you resized to in step 2, you are in deep do do.
Note.
You cannot move the start point of any partition.
You can join two or more partitions to make one larger partition, but
you can only do this and retain the (physically) first of the partitions.
If you have any doubts and care about your data, buy a new disk. If
you're working on a laptop, you can fiddle partitions as you copy the
data, and if you need to, you can copy Windows with ntfsprogs; one of
the programs in the set, ntfsclone does the grunt work, but there are
other useful tools in the set.
--
Cheers
John
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