Examples of using Disklabel in English and their translations into German
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Political
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Computer
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Programming
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Official/political
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Political
You can run now disklabel(8) like so.
FAT or NTFS boot sector, ext2/ext3 superblock, BSD disklabel….
You can use disklabel(8) to edit the disks.
Write your changes and quit disklabel.
Where disklabels are stored==Traditionally, the disklabel was the first sector of the disk.
More information on using disklabel can be found here.
Edit the disklabel of the disks you are trying to concatenate and change the types of partitions to 4.2BSD.
On the alpha, i386, and pc98 platforms, disklabel is a link to bsdlabel 8.
Disklabel-B diskslice where diskslice is the disk and slice you boot from, such as ad0s1 for the first slice on the first IDE disk.
These floppies must contain: fdisk, disklabel, newfs, mount, and whichever backup program you use.
Disklabel-e ad1 disklabel-e ad2 disklabel-e ad3 This opens up the current disk label on each disk with the editor specified by the EDITOR environment variable, typically vi 1.
To see what OpenBSD thinks yourLinux partition is but don't use disklabel or fdisk to make any changes to it.
Rd file, then fdisk, disklabel, and restore the desired configuration from tape or other media, and install the boot blocks.
Due to the use of 32-bit integers to store the number of sectors,bsdlabel(8)(called disklabel(8) in FreeBSD4. X) is limited to 2^32-1 sectors per disk or 2TB in most cases.
If the disklabel was damaged, use disklabel to re-partition and label the disk to match the label that you printed and saved.
If the proposed layout is not appropriate for your needs, you can, of course, edit the default or customize it completely,more details on the disklabel partitioning below.
When laying out file systems with disklabel(8) or sysinstall(8), remember that hard drives transfer data faster from the outer tracks to the inner.
To fix this, the disk's file systems must generally be recreated from scratch though if you REALLY know what you are doing,you may be able to recreate just your disklabel and MBR, and only lose and have to rebuild the first OpenBSD partition on the disk.
You can use the disklabel and newfs commands to put a UFS filesystem on them instead, as the following sequence of commands(for a 3.5" 1.44Â MB floppy) illustrates.
Here is the fdisk output; the easiest way of getting there is to resize the Windows partition(I use PartitionMagic) and move it to the end of the disk, then create an OpenBSD partition and ignore the partition resizing fdisk does-- just go ahead and create allthe filesystems you need with disklabel.
NOTE for re-installers: The new installer will not clear your old disklabel if you chose"(C)ustom Layout", but you will need to re-specify each mount point using the 'm' option in disklabel8.