Debian Partitioning Programs
Several varieties of partitioning programs have been adapted by Debian
developers to work on various types of hard disks and computer
architectures. Following is a list of the program(s) applicable for
your architecture.
partman
Recommended partitioning tool in Debian. This Swiss army knife can
also resize partitions, create filesystems
(format
in Windows speak)
and assign them to the mountpoints.
fdisk
The original Linux disk partitioner, good for gurus.
Be careful if you have existing FreeBSD partitions on your machine.
The installation kernels include support for these partitions, but the
way that fdisk represents them (or not) can make the
device names differ. See the
Linux+FreeBSD HOWTO.
cfdisk
A simple-to-use, full-screen disk partitioner for the rest of us.
Note that cfdisk doesn't understand FreeBSD
partitions at all, and, again, device names may differ as a result.
atari-fdisk
Atari-aware version of fdisk.
amiga-fdisk
Amiga-aware version of fdisk.
mac-fdisk
Mac-aware version of fdisk.
pmac-fdisk
PowerMac-aware version of fdisk, also used by BVM
and Motorola VMEbus systems.
fdasd
&arch-title; version of fdisk; Please read the
fdasd manual page or chapter 13 in
Device Drivers and Installation Commands for details.
One of these programs will be run by default when you select
Partition disks (or similar). It may be possible
to use a different partitioning tool from the command line on VT2, but this
is not recommended.
Remember to mark your boot partition as
Bootable
.
One key point when partitioning for Mac type disks is that the
swap partition is identified by its name; it must be named swap
.
All Mac linux partitions are the same partition type,
Apple_UNIX_SRV2. Please read the fine manual. We also suggest reading the
mac-fdisk Tutorial, which
includes steps you should take if you are sharing your disk with MacOS.
&partition-alpha.xml;
&partition-hppa.xml;
&partition-x86.xml;
&partition-ia64.xml;
&partition-mips.xml;
&partition-powerpc.xml;
&partition-sparc.xml;