On Tue, 2003-03-11 at 06:43, Metnetsky wrote:
I'm trying to install Debian, and was wondering how to use the ext3 File-System as opposed to ext2? The installer defaults me into cfdisk which only has ext2/swap as far as I can see. Suggestions? Oh yeah, I'm using the Debian-30r1 for i386 gotten a few days ago from a Debian mirror. Thanks in advance,
man tune2fs
Specifically, the -j option.
My personal installation story:
I installed Woody from a CD and so I had a 2.2 kernel.
I downloaded the 2.4.18 kernel source, then compiled it, making sure that ext3 support was provided.
Then I do:
tune2fs -j /dev/hda1
to turn hda1 from an ext2 into an ext3 partition, as inaccurate as that statement is.
In reality (AFAIK) it is still ext2 with some journaling added on top of it. If you ran it as an ext2, it wouldn't be a big deal.
And don't worry. It will not corrupt your files or anything when doing so. I thought you had to do this with a fresh partition or that you had to format the partition to do it when I was trying to do this my first time.
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