Partitioning for &arch-title;
If you have chosen to boot from the SRM console, you must use
fdisk to partition your disk, as it is the only
partitioning program that can manipulate the BSD disk labels required
by aboot (remember, the SRM boot block is
incompatible with MS-DOS partition tables - see
).
debian-installer will run fdisk
by default if you have not booted from MILO.
If the disk that you have selected for partitioning already contains a
BSD disk label, fdisk will default to BSD disk
label mode. Otherwise, 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.
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.