diskdruid will give you less control than fdisk. It usually forces it to
the end of the disk... nothing you can do. I don't advise that you put
swap at the beginning of the disk, since if you're using an x86, you
better have yerself a /boot partition (if you're using an IDE disk) at the
beginning of a couple MB.

On Sat, 14 Oct 2000, Kelly Scroggins wrote:

> I'm installing Red Hat as the only OS.  In
> partitioning my disk, I want to put the swap
> partition physically near the outside of the disk.
> I can see how fdisk will let me do this but
> diskdruid didn't work the way I intended.
> 
> With diskdruid the swap partition was the first
> one I created, but it ended up on another part of
> the disk.
> 
> Can anyone tell me how to control this with
> diskdruid?
> 
> Thanks,
> kelly
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Redhat-list mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
> 

-- 
-Statux



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