Thanks ken,
But I stated that I already know how to accomplish
this with fdisk. My question is concerning
diskdruid.
kelly
Quoting kf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
You can do this with "fdisk [device_name]". See man fdisk. You have to
know the math of disk geometry to use this.
Disk Druid is pretty smart about knowing where to put partitions. Unless
you've read the docs (and even if you have), it'll be a bit more complex
to use fdisk.
hth,
kf
--
My recommendation: Don't shop at Explorer Micro, Columbus, Ohio.
On Sat, 14 Oct 2000, Kelly Scroggins wrote:
= I'm installing Red Hat as the only OS. In
= partitioning my disk, I want to put the swap
= partition physically near the outside of the disk.
= I can see how fdisk will let me do this but
= diskdruid didn't work the way I intended.
=
= With diskdruid the swap partition was the first
= one I created, but it ended up on another part of
= the disk.
=
= Can anyone tell me how to control this with
= diskdruid?
=
= Thanks,
= kelly
=
=
=
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