From 74e594185d4421e862806c29fc0519dd337f1229 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Frans Pop Date: Sun, 19 Mar 2006 13:43:49 +0000 Subject: Update of original English docs --- fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml | 6 +++--- fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml | 4 ++-- fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml | 6 +++--- 3 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) (limited to 'fi/partitioning') diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml index 521a5e848..e93a8bb7f 100644 --- a/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/hppa.xml @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ - + Partitioning for &arch-title; @@ -15,8 +15,8 @@ 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. +to hold whatever kernels (and backups) you might wish to load; 25–50MB +is generally sufficient. diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml index fced09dca..c7864c635 100644 --- a/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/i386.xml @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ - + Partitioning for &arch-title; @@ -80,7 +80,7 @@ within the translated representation of the -The recommended way of accomplishing this is to create a small (5–10MB +The recommended way of accomplishing this is to create a small (25–50MB 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 diff --git a/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml b/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml index fa135ab9b..edd4d7176 100644 --- a/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml +++ b/fi/partitioning/partition/mips.xml @@ -1,13 +1,13 @@ - + Partitioning for &arch-title; -SGI Indys require an SGI disk label in order to make the system bootable +SGI machines 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. +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. -- cgit v1.2.3