Paul, Joachim, Gavin and Monique,
Thanks folks that was all very helpful... i've confirmed I am running on
ext3
Cheers, Stu
--
Stuart Robinson
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0xD881978E
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On Tue, Oct 07, 2003 at 07:35:12AM +0100, Stuart Robinson wrote:
Question: I've forgotten what kind of format my linux partitions are (I
suspect I chose 'linux' (ext3?)- how can I tell and if I really would
prefer a journalling format can I change
On Tue, Oct 07, 2003 at 07:35:12AM +0100, Stuart Robinson wrote:
Question: I've forgotten what kind of format my linux partitions are (I
suspect I chose 'linux' (ext3?)- how can I tell and if I really would
prefer a journalling format can I change it without a reinstall?
Look in /etc
On Wednesday 08 October 2003 19:40, Joachim Fahnenmueller wrote:
It shouldn't be necessary to reinstall. Worst case - ackup your data and
reformat the partition. I think it is even possible to upgrade a partition
from ext2 to ext3, but I don't know in detail.
Yes, not only is it possible, but
On Wed, 8 Oct 2003 20:40:53 +0200, Joachim Fahnenmueller
[EMAIL PROTECTED] penned:
It shouldn't be necessary to reinstall. Worst case - ackup your data
and reformat the partition. I think it is even possible to upgrade a
partition from ext2 to ext3, but I don't know in detail.
tune2fs -j
Hello all,
I'm two days into my first debian install *hurrah* (how nice is apt?)
Sorry.
Question: I've forgotten what kind of format my linux partitions are (I
suspect I chose 'linux' (ext3?)- how can I tell and if I really would
prefer a journalling format can I change it without a reinstall
On Tue, 7 Oct 2003, Stuart Robinson wrote:
Hello all,
I'm two days into my first debian install *hurrah* (how nice is apt?)
Sorry.
Question: I've forgotten what kind of format my linux partitions are (I
suspect I chose 'linux' (ext3?)- how can I tell and if I really would
prefer
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