Red Hat Linux 7.1: The Official Red Hat Linux Itanium Installation Guide | ||
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Prev | Chapter 4. Installing Red Hat Linux | Next |
This section applies only if you chose to use fdisk to partition your system. If are not using fdisk, please skip to the section called Disk Partitioning for automatic partitioning or the section called Partitioning Your System for partitioning with Disk Druid.
Caution | |
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Unless you have previously used fdisk and understand how it works, we do not recommend that you use it. Disk Druid is easier to understand than fdisk. To exit fdisk, click Back to return to the previous screen, deselect fdisk, and then click Next. |
If you have chosen to use fdisk, the next screen will prompt you to select a drive to partition using fdisk.
Once you have chosen which drive to partition, you will be presented
with the fdisk command screen. If you do not
know what command to use, type
/boot/efi is Type DOS | |
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You must create a /boot/efi partition of type DOS as the first primary partition with the size of 128 MB. |
When you are finished making partitions, type
Please Note | |
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None of the changes you make take effect until you save them and exit fdisk using the w command. You can quit fdisk at any time without saving changes using the q command. |
After you have partitioned your drive(s), click Next. Then you will need to use Disk Druid to assign mount points to the partitions you just created with fdisk.
You will not be able to add new partitions using Disk Druid, but you will be able to edit mount points for the partitions you have already created.
For each partition you created with fdisk, click on the Edit button, choose the appropriate mount point for that partition from the pulldown menu, and click on OK.