[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Goswin Brederlow) wrote on 21.06.97 in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> The script should eigther reboot after the disk holding root is > partitioned or try to remount root r/w. Rebooting is a bit anoying when > you only changed the type of another partition from DOS\0 to LNX\0, > whereas remounting might get stuck if the partition holding root has > changed name or place. So rebooting is probably the savest. It's not only getting stuck. It's that the kernel doesn't know what you have done to the partition table. You do something to the drive with the new partition table in mind, and the kernel interprets your actions based on the old partition table. It might lead to you creating a new file system where you think is a spare partition, but instead hitting your valuable data from which you have no backup, because the kernel counts partitions different from you. Going on without reboot is really dangerous. Only people who thoroughly understand the issues involved should try it. Much, much better just to reboot. On the other hand, repartitioning a drive with no mounted partitions is completely harmless; the kernel will just reread the partition table and go ahead. MfG Kai -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .