> 
> 
> --- andre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > 
> > > SI Reasoning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > 
> > > [...]
> > > 
> > > >    Device Boot    Start       End    Blocks   Id
> > 
> > > > System
> > > > /dev/hda1             8       209   1527088+   b
> > Win95 FAT32
> > > > /dev/hda2           210       650   3333960   17
> > Hidden HPFS/NTFS
> > > > /dev/hda3   *         1         7     52888+  83
> > Linux
> > > > /dev/hda4           651      1559   6872040    f
> > Win95 Ext'd (LBA)
> > > > /dev/hda5           651       693    325048+  82
> > Linux swap
> > > > /dev/hda6          1425      1559   1020568+  83
> > Linux
> > > > /dev/hda7           694      1371   5125648+  83
> > Linux
> > > > /dev/hda8          1372      1424    400648+  83
> > Linux
> > > 
> > > if Partition Magic doesn't handle such classical
> > partition tables i don't know
> > > what to do...
> > > 
> > It could be hda4 being typ f or that the partions
> > are not in order. You
> > could change both of this facts with fdisk. But then
> > why would you need
> > PM.
> >
> I am not real familiar with fdisk so I don't know what
> you mean by type f or how to change the order... but I
type f is a surtend type of extended partion. Me think 5 is normally the
version windows uses. 

What i mean by changing the order is that hda6 is after hda7 and hda8 on
the harddisk. 

You can all change that quite easy with fdisk.

> mostly use PM for resizing partitions without losing
> the info inside. 
> 
> 
Why would you want to do that.:) 

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