Difference between revisions of "Raspberry Pi Disk Partitions"
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
* sda6 - Optimizing Boot - Jordan Huestis (jbhuestis) | * sda6 - Optimizing Boot - Jordan Huestis (jbhuestis) | ||
* sda7 | * sda7 | ||
− | * sda8 | + | * sda8 - Testing Alternate Browsers - Dayu Guan (Dguan) |
* sda9 | * sda9 | ||
Latest revision as of 18:00, 24 November 2011
Disk partitions in use on the Raspberry Pi:
- sda1 - Fedora 13 with a lot of experiments ;-) - ctyler and paulw
- sda2 - Fedora 13 experiments - ctyler
- sda3
- sda5 - Configuring X Windows - Tommy Cho Long Chor (toomy)
- sda6 - Optimizing Boot - Jordan Huestis (jbhuestis)
- sda7
- sda8 - Testing Alternate Browsers - Dayu Guan (Dguan)
- sda9
If you want a disk partition, claim it by filling in the list above.
Recommendation for copying partitions:
- Claim a partition above
- Make sure it's empty!
- Format it with
mkfs -t ext3 /dev/PARTITIONID
- Mount it:
mnt /dev/PARTITIONID /mnt/whatever
- Copy it:
cp -x -R -p -v / /mnt/whatever
- The -x prevents the copy from proceeding to other filesystems
- Copy /boot/cmdline.txt to
/boot/cmdline.PARTITIONID
- Edit /boot/cmdline.PARTITIONID to say:
root=/dev/PARTITIONID
- Whenever you want to boot from your partition:
cp /boot/cmdline.PARTITIONID /boot/cmdline.txt
- Change
/etc/motd
in your partition to tell people which partition they're on