Although it is theoretically possible to use a full disk to house your Linux
system, this is almost never done in practice. Instead, full disk block devices
are split up in smaller, more manageable block devices. On
Itanium systems use EFI, the Extensible Firmware Interface, for booting. The partition table format that EFI understands is called GPT, or GUID Partition Table. The partitioning program that understands GPT is called "parted", so that is the tool we will use below. Additionally, EFI can only read FAT filesystems, so that is the format to use for the EFI boot partition, where the kernel will be installed by "elilo".
The
If you are not interested in drawing up a partitioning scheme for your system, you can use the partitioning scheme we use throughout this book:
| Partition | Filesystem | Size | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
If you are interested in knowing how big a partition should be, or even how
many partitions you need, read on. Otherwise continue now with partitioning
your disk by reading
The number of partitions is highly dependent on your environment. For instance,
if you have lots of users, you will most likely want to have your
As you can see, it very much depends on what you want to achieve. Separate partitions or volumes have the following advantages:
However, multiple partitions have disadvantages as well. If not configured
properly, you will have a system with lots of free space on one partition and
none on another. Another nuisance is that separate partitions - especially
for important mountpoints like
There is also a 15-partition limit for SCSI and SATA, unless you use GPT labels.
As an example partitioning, we show you one for a 20GB disk, used as a demonstration laptop (containing webserver, mailserver, gnome, ...):
$ df -h Filesystem Type Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on /dev/sda5 ext3 509M 132M 351M 28% / /dev/sda2 ext3 5.0G 3.0G 1.8G 63% /home /dev/sda7 ext3 7.9G 6.2G 1.3G 83% /usr /dev/sda8 ext3 1011M 483M 477M 51% /opt /dev/sda9 ext3 2.0G 607M 1.3G 32% /var /dev/sda1 ext2 51M 17M 31M 36% /boot /dev/sda6 swap 516M 12M 504M 2% <not mounted>(Unpartitioned space for future usage: 2 GB)
The following parts explain how to create the example partition layout described previously, namely:
| Partition | Description |
|---|---|
Change your partition layout according to your own preference.
# parted /dev/sda
Once in
GNU Parted 1.6.22 Copyright (C) 1998 - 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. Using /dev/sda (parted)
At this point one of the available commands is
(parted) print Disk geometry for /dev/sda: 0.000-34732.890 megabytes Disk label type: gpt Minor Start End Filesystem Name Flags 1 0.017 203.938 fat32 boot 2 203.938 4243.468 linux-swap 3 4243.469 34724.281 ext3
This particular configuration is very similar to the one that we recommend above. Note on the second line that the partition table is type is GPT. If it is different, then the ia64 system will not be able to boot from this disk. For the sake of this guide we'll remove the partitions and create them anew.
The easy way to remove all partitions and start fresh, which guarantees that we
are using the correct partition type, is to make a new partition table using the
(parted) mklabel gpt (parted) print Disk geometry for /dev/sda: 0.000-34732.890 megabytes Disk label type: gpt Minor Start End Filesystem Name Flags
Now that the partition table is empty, we're ready to create the partitions. We will use a default partitioning scheme as discussed previously. Of course, don't follow these instructions to the letter if you don't want the same partitioning scheme!
We first create a small EFI boot partition. This is required to be a FAT
filesystem in order for the
(parted) mkpart primary fat32 0 32 (parted) print Disk geometry for /dev/sda: 0.000-34732.890 megabytes Disk label type: gpt Minor Start End Filesystem Name Flags 1 0.017 32.000 fat32
Let's now create the swap partition. The classic size to make the swap partition was twice the amount of RAM in the system. In modern systems with lots of RAM, this is no longer necessary. For most desktop systems, a 512 megabyte swap partition is sufficient. For a server, you should consider something larger to reflect the anticipated needs of the server.
(parted) mkpart primary linux-swap 32 544 (parted) print Disk geometry for /dev/sda: 0.000-34732.890 megabytes Disk label type: gpt Minor Start End Filesystem Name Flags 1 0.017 32.000 fat32 2 32.000 544.000
Finally, let's create the root partition. Our configuration will make the root partition to occupy the rest of the disk. We default to ext3, but you can use ext2, jfs, reiserfs or xfs if you prefer. The actual filesystem is not created in this step, but the partition table contains an indication of what kind of filesystem is stored on each partition, and it's a good idea to make the table match your intentions.
(parted) mkpart primary ext3 544 34732.890 (parted) print Disk geometry for /dev/sda: 0.000-34732.890 megabytes Disk label type: gpt Minor Start End Filesystem Name Flags 1 0.017 32.000 fat32 2 32.000 544.000 3 544.000 34732.874
To quit from parted, type
(parted) quit Information: Don't forget to update /etc/fstab, if necessary.
Now that your partitions are created, you can continue with
Now that your partitions are created, it is time to place a filesystem on them.
If you don't care about what filesystem to choose and are happy with what we use
as default in this handbook, continue with
To create a filesystem on a partition or volume, there are tools available for each possible filesystem:
| Filesystem | Creation Command |
|---|---|
For instance, to have the boot partition (
# mkdosfs /dev/sda1 # mkfs.ext3 /dev/sda3
# mkswap /dev/sda2
To activate the swap partition, use
# swapon /dev/sda2
Create and activate the swap with the commands mentioned above.
Now that your partitions are initialized and are housing a filesystem, it is
time to mount those partitions. Use the
# mount /dev/sda3 /mnt/gentoo
We will also have to mount the proc filesystem (a virtual interface with the
kernel) on
Continue with