That was all I got. On other distro I will have
/dev/hde3 ...... /dev/hde1 ...... /dev/hde5 ....... etc.
I can't understand why
Some distros decide for you that you need a /boot partition, a /var partition, a /usr partition, a /home partition, and so on... Other distros, like Gentoo, let you decide which and how many paritions you want vs need.
The "-h" option to 'df' *might* not display all partitions, like 'swap'. Also, Gentoo encourages you to not mount /boot during normal usage. I'm guessing you have a / (root) partition, swap, and /boot.
Regards
Hall
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