John Levine wrote: > I set up my laptop to dual boot between [EMAIL PROTECTED] and FreeBSD. When I > first set it up I made the partitions the same size, but since then I > found I do a lot more with FreeBSD so I'd rather give it more space. > > So the last time I had to reinstall Windows from scratch, I made its > partition smaller. Now there's a big chunk of free space between > the two partitions. Should I expect the following to work? > > (back everything up, duh) > > Boot from a CD, change the partition table to make the FreeBSD partition > start right after the Windows partition > > Use dd to move down the existing FreeBSD partition data so it starts > at the beginning of the new partition > > Use growfs to give the extra space to my /usr filesystem, which is at > the end of the existing partition > > Or should I just back it all up to a USB disk, reformat, and restore it, > which will take considerably longer? > > R's, > John
It's like a sorting programming problem. In order to move objects of similar sizes between 2 locations, you need 3 locations total : 1 destination, 1 target, and 1 temporary. Similar ideologies apply here. You need to a) dump(3) the data from your FreeBSD disk into a safe spot, and b) copy over all of your Windows files into (another?) safe spot, then, c) install XP over from scratch with the new scheme, and d) boot using a freebsd snapshot iso, copy all of your files over again by "un-dump(3)'ing" them, and modify /etc/fstab accordingly. Cheers, -Garrett _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
