On Fri, 2008-10-03 at 18:11 -0700, Antonio Olivares wrote: > > > --- On Fri, 10/3/08, Gerry Tool <gerrytool@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > From: Gerry Tool <gerrytool@xxxxxxxxx> > > Subject: Re: is there a way to tell that you have ext4 filesystem vs ext3 > > To: olivares14031@xxxxxxxxx, "For testers of Fedora Core development releases" <fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx> > > Date: Friday, October 3, 2008, 5:33 PM > > On Fri, Oct 3, 2008 at 7:23 PM, Antonio Olivares > > <olivares14031@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Dear fellow testers, > > > > > > Is there a way to tell if one is running ext4 > > filesystem vs. ext3? Run 'mount'. If it's ext4, the filesystem will be listed as 'ext4dev'. > > > I used ext4 boot parameter to install Fedora 10 Beta, > > but I am not sure that the filesystem is ext4 :( Unless you did custom partitioning and told it to use ext4, you got the standard setup - which means ext3. > > > > > > Thanks, > > > > > > Antonio > > > > If you run Gparted, will it show the file system type > > correctly? > > Gparted does not show the filesystem types? If it does, how do I run it? > I tried LiveCD, but it does not show what filesystem type it is. fdisk shows: > > [root@riohigh ~]# fdisk -l fdisk shows the *partition* type. partitions can contain any filesystem type that Linux knows about. So this won't help. -w -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list