Parted Not Found
JP Jamous
JP at Jepelsy.com
Wed Apr 28 17:33:22 EDT 2010
Great! As soon as I am done with this client web site, I guess I have some
fun to do tonight. Thanks for the help.
-----Original Message-----
From: speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca [mailto:speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca]
On Behalf Of trev.saunders at gmail.com
Sent: Wednesday, April 28, 2010 5:24 PM
To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.
Subject: Re: Parted Not Found
Hi,
> I can afford losing the partition. I have an image of it. Plus this
> computer has no screen nor keyboard. It is my testing machine.
ok, unless you want to have fun fiddling with ntfs resize and parted I'd say
re partition the disk and forget about the ntfs partition. What I'd do is
figure out how you'd ideally layout partition sizes, and use parted to set
up the partition table according to you wishes, then once linux is
installed, you can copy the windows image onto the desired partition.
FIrst to clear the old partition table just use rm with each partition you
want to remove, then use create, and mkfs to make filesystems.
> What I found interesting is that you told me to leave the rest
> unpartitioned. Does that mean ArchLinux would create a primary
> partition upon installation?
I can't speak to the arch installer, but yes, when you went to install linux
you'd be able to partition the free space as you liked.
> Secondly, since it is a pain to take the hard drive out and hook it
> externally to my other machine, is it possible to wipe the hard drive
> using parted? I can then create a blank partition and throw the
> Windows image on it. I assume RM 2 would delete it.
>
yes, as above rm will delete the given partition. then just setup the new
partitioning scheme as you like, and copy the windows image.
It doesn't really matter here, but fyi unless you specifically ask it to
parted won't touch the data on the drive, it'll just change the partition
table that says were partitions start. If you want to have some fun, I've
seen this work, you can remove a partition from the table, and then put it
back in the partition table and you'r data is still ok. Noe though that
actually destroying the data on the disk does trully destroy the data.
HTH
Trev
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