From aae019d71a095b4bf234a1204e9508ee82167899 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Frans Pop Date: Tue, 1 Sep 2009 17:22:27 +0000 Subject: Remove untranslated and obsolete files for the Basque translation --- eu/partitioning/partition/x86.xml | 86 --------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 86 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 eu/partitioning/partition/x86.xml (limited to 'eu/partitioning/partition/x86.xml') diff --git a/eu/partitioning/partition/x86.xml b/eu/partitioning/partition/x86.xml deleted file mode 100644 index 26c3e4296..000000000 --- a/eu/partitioning/partition/x86.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,86 +0,0 @@ - - - - - Partitioning for &arch-title; - - -The PC BIOS generally adds additional constraints for disk -partitioning. There is a limit to how many primary and -logical partitions a drive can contain. Additionally, with pre -1994-98 BIOS, there are limits to where on the drive the BIOS can boot -from. More information can be found in the - Linux Partition HOWTO and the -Phoenix BIOS FAQ, but -this section will include a brief overview to help you plan most -situations. - - - -Primary partitions are the original partitioning scheme for PC -disks. However, there can only be four of them. To get past this -limitation, extended and logical partitions were invented. By -setting one of your primary partitions as an extended partition, you -can subdivide all the space allocated to that partition into logical -partitions. You can create up to 60 logical partitions per extended -partition; however, you can only have one extended partition per -drive. - - - -Linux limits the partitions per drive to 15 partitions for SCSI disks -(3 usable primary partitions, 12 logical partitions), and 63 -partitions on an IDE drive (3 usable primary partitions, 60 logical -partitions). However the normal &debian; system provides -only 20 devices for partitions, so you may not install on partitions -higher than 20 unless you first manually create devices for those -partitions. - - - -If you have a large IDE disk, and are using neither LBA addressing, -nor overlay drivers (sometimes provided by hard disk manufacturers), -then the boot partition (the partition containing your kernel image) -must be placed within the first 1024 cylinders of your hard drive -(usually around 524 megabytes, without BIOS translation). - - - -This restriction doesn't apply if you have a BIOS newer than around -1995-98 (depending on the manufacturer) that supports the Enhanced -Disk Drive Support Specification. Both Lilo, the Linux loader, and -Debian's alternative mbr must use the BIOS to read the -kernel from the disk into RAM. If the BIOS int 0x13 large disk access -extensions are found to be present, they will be utilized. Otherwise, -the legacy disk access interface is used as a fall-back, and it cannot -be used to address any location on the disk higher than the 1023rd -cylinder. Once Linux is booted, no matter what BIOS your computer -has, these restrictions no longer apply, since Linux does not use the -BIOS for disk access. - - - -If you have a large disk, you might have to use cylinder translation -techniques, which you can set from your BIOS setup program, such as -LBA (Logical Block Addressing) or CHS translation mode (Large). -More information about issues with large disks can be found in the -Large Disk HOWTO. If you -are using a cylinder translation scheme, and the BIOS does not support -the large disk access extensions, then your boot partition has to fit -within the translated representation of the -1024th cylinder. - - - -The recommended way of accomplishing this is to create a small (5-10MB -should suffice) partition at the beginning of the disk to be used as -the boot partition, and then create whatever other partitions you wish -to have, in the remaining area. This boot partition -must be mounted on /boot, -since that is the directory where the Linux kernel(s) will be stored. -This configuration will work on any system, regardless of whether LBA -or large disk CHS translation is used, and regardless of whether your -BIOS supports the large disk access extensions. - - - -- cgit v1.2.3