Once upon a time Henry Lenzi said... > > I am currently running Woody and I created a chrooted sid partition. > Here's my current partition scheme for sid:
If sid is in a chroot, it does not have a partitioning scheme. It lives on the filesystem on which woody was installed. > Filesystem 1k-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on > /dev/hda2 4806080 4711892 0 100% / > /dev/hda5 3844584 119880 3529408 4% /var > /dev/hda4 2691228 862848 1691672 34% /root > /dev/hda1 189339 1333 178230 1% /boot > /dev/hda6 3844584 2486176 1163112 69% /usr > /dev/hda7 3844584 2864268 785020 79% /home > > I would like to know if there's a way to change this default when you're > installing sid. Let me rephrase that: how do I install chrooted sid with an > arbitrary partition scheme and what tools do I use for that? Basically, you can't change the partitioning scheme. You have only one set of partitions regardless of how many chroot installations you have. The chroot installations live on the existing partitions that were created when you set up woody. If I were in your situation, I would probably backup /var to somewhere on /home and very very carefully repartition the drive, taking note of *exactly* which cylinder each partition starts on. Since hda2 (root) and hda5 (/var) *in your setup* are contiguous, it should be possible to jiggle the partitions so that you end up with more space on your root filesystem and less on /var. However, I dont recommend this unless you can afford to reload everything in case it mucks up, and only if you are sure of what you are doing. Others may come up with better solutions - I'd wait to see what else comes up on this thread. Maybe there's a partitioning tool that will do it with little to no risk. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]