Date: Sun, 03 Sep 2000 11:53:47 +0200 From: Tim Priebe <tim@polytechnic.edu.na> To: thomas@noproblem.net Cc: chad@DCFinc.com, cjclark@alum.mit.edu, JDBitters@cs.com, freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: 4.1-STABLE BOOT SLICE PROBLEM Message-ID: <39B21FAB.FCA3C0CA@polytechnic.edu.na> References: <000c01c01546$f334ed40$0101a8c0@noproblem.net>
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Thomas Beauchamp wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> My understanding is:
>
> a 'slice', in FreeBSD lingo is a 'Microsoft's partition', of which you can
> only have FOUR (past the MBR and partition table).
> FreeBSD partitions exist on a Microsoft slice, and you can have up to 8
> FreeBSD partitions per slice.
> So a 'dangerously dedicated disk', having nothing to do with Microsoft, has
> essentially no slice, just partitions. Am I right?
>
> But I find it confusing that FreeBSD uses the 's' of slice in its naming
> terminology : '/dev/da0s1a' for instance, whilst other versions of BSD omit
> the 'slice information' and would call the root file system '/dev/da0a'
> instead. I understand that FreeBSD support this terminology too
> ('compatibility slice naming'), but it's all confusing for me: when
> Microsoft 'partitions' are not there AT ALL (as it is the case in a
> 'dangerously dedicated disk'), why then use the term 'slice'?
Actually you can have multiple slices on a dangerously dedicated disk.
Try the following:
do a dangerously dedicated install onto a small disk.
then do a dd to copy the small disk to a bigger one.
boot off the new disk and run sysinstall. Go into Fdisk, you will see
that there is free space. Create a new slice, and then lable it, and
create a file system. Worked fine for me when I tested it to see what
would happen.
Tim.
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