Afraid I don't quite understand your question. 

fdisk is a Linux app that you use to partition hard disks -- it works with
IDE and SCSI disks. 

SCSI is, of course, a type of interface used for hard disks and other
devices. Unlike DOS & Windows, Linux uses different device identifiers for
scsi disks. Where the usual first IDE hard disk (the primary master) is
/dev/hda, and its partitions /dev/hda1, /dev/hda2, etc., the first scsi
drive will be /dev/sda, and its partitions /dev/sda1, /dev/sda2, etc.

Did this tell you what you need to know? If so, great. If not, please feel
free to ask again.

At 12:11 PM 4/10/99 +0800, mkttrn1 wrote:
>Any one can  kindly enlighten me with when to use and what's the difference of
>using to configure partition with fdisk and SCSI?

------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
Ray Olszewski                                        -- Han Solo
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