Disk partitioning and swap
Mike Bilow
mikebw at bilow.bilow.uu.ids.net
Sat Apr 3 17:50:00 EST 1999
Jerry Feldman {75562} wrote in a message to Mike Bilow:
JF{> I had recently recommended Linux to a friend in upstate New
JF{> York. He got Red Hat 5.2. Red Hat uses Disk Druid as its
JF{> primary partitioning tool. He found it very confusing, even
JF{> after I told him to make 1 large partition. When dealing
JF{> with non-technical people, the installations should be set
JF{> up simplisticly.
I've never been able to figure out Disk Druid, either, and I don't consider
myself a novice. When the guys writing the device drivers can't operate the
partitioning tool, there's something wrong. When I have had to install Red
Hat, and it's not my personal preference, I have had to drop out to a shell and
use fdisk to get what I wanted. It simply was not worth the effort to bang my
head against the wall learning Disk Druid.
JF{> I also have installed Debian 2.0 (I have 2.1, but have not
JF{> yet installed it).
JF{> Debian 2.0 is not for novices. It is a very thorough
JF{> release, but one needs to know what one is doing. even if
JF{> you are using one of their canned release profiles.
Debian 2.1 is not significantly different from 2.0 in the installation
procedure. While Debian's installation front-end is not very friendly, almost
anyone should be able to get a reasonable result by taking all of the defaults.
-- Mike
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