Hi I use primary partitions for linux and swap but don't know if that's right. Hopefully, someone more experienced will explain the pro's and con's of using logical over primary partitions. I'd extend your partition to cover any free space. Depending upon what distribution and what choices you make, the boot loader is likely to be configured automatically. Providing that disk is an IDE disk on the primary controller and is the master your structure is: (Providing I'm not too confused regarding logical partitions) /dev/hda1 vfat Windows /dev/hda2 Linux Swap /dev/hda3 Linux Ex2 Gena -----Original Message----- From: speakup-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:speakup-admin at braille.uwo.ca]On Behalf Of Jared Sent: 01 April 2002 01:42 To: Speakup Mailing List (E-mail) Subject: finished partitioning got more questions Hello I finished partitioning my drive into a linux x2 that is about 6.5 gigs and a 258.9 megabyte swap partition. My question is what commands do I pass to the boot loader when I install as far as drives go? I'm putting the full contence of the partition magic listing as far as file systems go in exact order. C drive fat32 primary active something just labeled 1 extended primary with no file system swap space logical linux x2 logical unalocated space I don't know how the extended one came up unless its what the program decided to put the logical partitions in. I just followed the wisard here so if I did something wrong and need to clean it up please let me know. I'm not afraid of reformatting anyway since I just did that two days ago and have nothing of real worth on this machine that I can't install again or haven't backed up. Thanks for any help on this. _______________________________________________ Speakup mailing list Speakup at braille.uwo.ca http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup