From 1ea73eea5ecc6a8ed901316049259aee737ee554 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Joey Hess Date: Fri, 7 Oct 2005 19:51:38 +0000 Subject: move manual to top-level directory, split out of debian-installer package --- fi/partitioning/partition/alpha.xml | 58 ++++++++++++++++ fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml | 22 ++++++ fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml | 94 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ fi/partitioning/partition/ia64.xml | 125 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml | 16 +++++ fi/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml | 57 ++++++++++++++++ fi/partitioning/partition/sparc.xml | 33 +++++++++ 7 files changed, 405 insertions(+) create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/alpha.xml create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/ia64.xml create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml create mode 100644 fi/partitioning/partition/sparc.xml (limited to 'fi/partitioning/partition') diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/alpha.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/alpha.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..240e7bd3d --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/alpha.xml @@ -0,0 +1,58 @@ + + + + + Partitioning for &arch-title; + + +Booting Debian from the SRM console (the only disk boot method supported +by &releasename;) requires you to have a BSD disk label, not a DOS +partition table, on your boot disk. (Remember, the SRM boot block is +incompatible with MS-DOS partition tables — see +.) As a result, partman +creates BSD disk labels when running on &architecture;, but if your disk +has an existing DOS partition table the existing partitions will need to +be deleted before partman can convert it to use a disk label. + + + +If you have chosen to use fdisk to partition your +disk, and the disk that you have selected for partitioning does not +already contain a BSD disk label, you must use the b +command to enter disk label mode. + + + +Unless you wish to use the disk you are partitioning from Tru64 Unix +or one of the free 4.4BSD-Lite derived operating systems (FreeBSD, +OpenBSD, or NetBSD), it is suggested that you do +not make the third partition contain the whole +disk. This is not required by aboot, and in fact, +it may lead to confusion since the swriteboot +utility used to install aboot in the boot sector +will complain about a partition overlapping with the boot block. + + + +Also, because aboot is written to the first few +sectors of the disk (currently it occupies about 70 kilobytes, or 150 +sectors), you must leave enough empty space at +the beginning of the disk for it. In the past, it was suggested that +you make a small partition at the beginning of the disk, to be left +unformatted. For the same reason mentioned above, we now suggest that +you do not do this on disks that will only be used by GNU/Linux. When +using partman, a small partition will still be +created for aboot for convenience reasons. + + + +For ARC installations, you should make a small FAT partition at the +beginning of the disk to contain MILO and +linload.exe — 5 megabytes should be sufficient, see +. Unfortunately, making FAT +file systems from the menu is not yet supported, so you'll have to do +it manually from the shell using mkdosfs before +attempting to install the boot loader. + + + diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..521a5e848 --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ + + + + + Partitioning for &arch-title; + + +PALO, the HPPA boot loader, requires a partition of type F0 somewhere +in the first 2GB. This is where the boot loader and an optional kernel +and RAMdisk will be stored, so make it big enough for that — at least +4Mb (I like 8–16MB). An additional requirement of the firmware is that +the Linux kernel must reside within the first 2GB of the disk. This +is typically achieved by making the root ext2 partition fit entirely +within the first 2GB of the disk. Alternatively you can create a small +ext2 partition near the start of the disk and mount that on +/boot, since that is the directory where the Linux +kernel(s) will be stored. /boot needs to be big enough +to hold whatever kernels you might wish load; 8–16MB is generally +sufficient. + + + diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c4d621477 --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml @@ -0,0 +1,94 @@ + + + + + Partitioning for &arch-title; + + +If you have an existing other operating system such as DOS or Windows and +you want to preseve that operating system while installing Debian, you may +need to resize its partition to free up space for the Debian installation. +The installer supports resizing of both FAT and NTFS filesystems; when you +get to the installer's partitioning step, select the option to partition +manually and then simply select an existing partition and change its size. + + + +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 BIOSes, 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. + + + diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/ia64.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/ia64.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1dc42db62 --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/ia64.xml @@ -0,0 +1,125 @@ + + + + + Partitioning for &arch-title; + + + +The partman disk partitioner is the default +partitioning tool for the installer. +It manages the set of partitions and their mount points to ensure +that the disks and filesystems is properly configured for a successful +installation. It actually uses the parted to +do the on-disk partitioning. + + + + + EFI Recognized Formats + + +The IA64 EFI firmware supports two partition table (or disk label) +formats, GPT and MS-DOS. MS-DOS, the format typically used on i386 +PCs, is no longer recommended for IA64 systems. Although +the installer also provides the cfdisk, +you should only use the +parted because only it can manage both GPT +and MS-DOS tables correctly. + + + + + +The automatic partitioning recipes for partman +allocate an EFI partition as the first partition on the disk. +You can also set up the partition under the Guided +partitioning from the main menu in a manner similar to +setting up a swap partition. + + + +The partman partitioner will handle most disk +layouts. +For those rare cases where it is necessary to manually set up a disk, +you can use the shell as described above and run the +parted utility directly using its command line interface. +Assuming that you want to erase your whole disk and create a GPT table +and some partitions, then something similar to the following command +sequence could be used: + + + mklabel gpt + mkpartfs primary fat 0 50 + mkpartfs primary linux-swap 51 1000 + mkpartfs primary ext2 1001 3000 + set 1 boot on + print + quit + + +This creates a new partition table, and three partitions to be used as +an EFI boot partition, swap space, and a root file system. Finally it +sets the boot flag on the EFI partition. Partitions are specified in +Megabytes, with start and end offsets from the beginning of the disk. +So, for example, above we created a 1999MB ext2 file system starting +at offset 1001MB from the start of the disk. Note that formatting swap +space with parted can take a few minutes to +complete, as it scans the partition for bad blocks. + + + + + Boot Loader Partition Requirements + + + +ELILO, the ia64 boot loader, requires a partition containing a FAT +file system with the boot flag set. +The partition must be big enough to hold the boot loader and any +kernels or RAMdisks you may wish to boot. A minimum size would be +about 20MB, but if you expect to run with multiple kernels, then +128MB might be a better size. + + + +The EFI Boot Manager and the EFI Shell fully support the GPT table +so the boot partition does not necessarily have to be the first +partition or even on the same disk. +This is convenient if you should forget to allocate the partition and +only find out after you have formatted the other partitions on your disk(s). +The partman partitioner checks for an EFI partition +at the same time it checks for a properly set up root +partition. +This gives you an opportunity to correct the disk layout before the +package install begins. +The easiest way to correct this omission is to shrink the last partition +of the disk to make enough free space for adding an EFI partition. + + + +It is strongly recommended that you allocate the EFI boot partition +on the same disk as the root filesystem. + + + + + + EFI Diagnostic Partitions + + + +The EFI firmware is significantly more sophisticated than the usual +BIOS seen on most x86 PCs. +Some system vendors take advantage of the ability of the EFI to +access files and run programs from a hard disk filesystem to store diagnostics +and EFI based system management utilities on the hard disk. +This is a separate FAT format filesystem on the system disk. +Consult the system documentation and accessories that come with the +system for details. +The easiest time to set up a diagnostics partition is at the same time you +set up the EFI boot partition. + + + + diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fa135ab9b --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml @@ -0,0 +1,16 @@ + + + + + Partitioning for &arch-title; + + +SGI Indys require an SGI disk label in order to make the system bootable +from hard disk. It can be created in the fdisk expert menu. The thereby +created volume header(partition number 9) should be at least 3MB large. +If the volume header created is too small, you can simply delete +partition number 9 and re-add it with a different size. Note that the +volume header must start at sector 0. + + + diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..99e8324ee --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/powerpc.xml @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ + + + + + Partitioning Newer PowerMacs + + +If you are installing onto a NewWorld PowerMac you must create a +special bootstrap partition to hold the boot loader. The size of this +partition must be 800KB and its partition type must be +Apple_Bootstrap. If the bootstrap partition is +not created with the Apple_Bootstrap type your +machine cannot be made bootable from the hard disk. This partition +can easily be created by creating a new partition in +partman and telling it to use it as a NewWorld +boot partition, or in mac-fdisk using the +b command. + + + +The special partition type Apple_Bootstrap is required to prevent +MacOS from mounting and damaging the bootstrap partition, as there are +special modifications made to it in order for OpenFirmware to boot it +automatically. + + + +Note that the bootstrap partition is only meant to hold 3 very small +files: the yaboot binary, its configuration +yaboot.conf, and a first stage OpenFirmware +loader ofboot.b. It need not and must not be +mounted on your file system nor have kernels or anything else copied +to it. The ybin and mkofboot +utilities are used to manipulate this partition. + + + +In order for OpenFirmware to automatically boot &debian; the bootstrap +partition should appear before other boot partitions on the disk, +especially MacOS boot partitions. The bootstrap partition should be +the first one you create. However, if you add a bootstrap partition +later, you can use mac-fdisk's +r command to reorder the partition map so the +bootstrap partition comes right after the map (which is always +partition 1). It's the logical map order, not the physical address +order, that counts. + + + +Apple disks normally have several small driver partitions. If you +intend to dual boot your machine with MacOSX, you should retain these +partitions and a small HFS partition (800k is the minimum size). That +is because MacOSX, on every boot, offers to initialize any disks which do +not have active MacOS partitions and driver partitions. + + + diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/sparc.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/sparc.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f4996a519 --- /dev/null +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/sparc.xml @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ + + + + + Partitioning for &arch-title; + + +Make sure you create a Sun disk label on your boot disk. This is +the only kind of partition scheme that the OpenBoot PROM understands, +and so it's the only scheme from which you can boot. The +s key is used in fdisk to +create Sun disk labels. + + + +Furthermore, on &arch-title; disks, make sure your first partition on +your boot disk starts at cylinder 0. While this is required, it also +means that the first partition will contain the partition table and +the boot block, which are the first two sectors of the disk. You must +not put swap on the first partition of the boot +drive, since swap partitions do not preserve the first few sectors of +the partition. You can put Ext2 or UFS partitions there; these will +leave the partition table and the boot block alone. + + + +It is also advised that the third partition should be of type Whole +disk (type 5), and contain the entire disk (from the first cylinder +to the last). This is simply a convention of Sun disk labels, and +helps the SILO boot loader keep its bearings. + + + \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3