On Friday 19 September 2008 12:17:35 Oliver Fromme wrote:
Oliver Fromme [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Matthew Seaman wrote:
Mel wrote:
that's aside from the fact that the root partition '/' always has to
be the first partition, for the simple reason that everything else
is
Matthew Seaman wrote:
Mel wrote:
that's aside from the fact that the root partition '/' always has to be
the
first partition, for the simple reason that everything else is mounted on
top
of it.
It's not the partition device names that determine the mount order, but
the
Oliver Fromme [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Matthew Seaman wrote:
Mel wrote:
that's aside from the fact that the root partition '/' always has to be
the
first partition, for the simple reason that everything else is mounted
on top
of it.
It's not the partition device
I'm trying to install freeBSD on my pc, but after the installation it
doesn't boot. It can't find the kernel.
I think it is the problem with my partitioning. i'm trying this order:
/boot
swap
/
/var
/usr
Can you help me how to install in this order?
Robert Lebovich skrev:
I'm trying to install freeBSD on my pc, but after the installation it
doesn't boot. It can't find the kernel.
I think it is the problem with my partitioning. i'm trying this order:
/boot
swap
/
/var
/usr
Can you help me how to install in this order?
On Thu, Sep 18, 2008 at 03:32:09PM +0200, Leslie Jensen wrote:
Robert Lebovich skrev:
I'm trying to install freeBSD on my pc, but after the installation it
doesn't boot. It can't find the kernel.
I think it is the problem with my partitioning. i'm trying this order:
/boot
swap
/
/var
On Thu, Sep 18, 2008 at 03:49:37PM +0300, Robert Lebovich wrote:
I'm trying to install freeBSD on my pc, but after the installation it
doesn't boot. It can't find the kernel.
I think it is the problem with my partitioning. i'm trying this order:
/boot
swap
/
/var
/usr
Can you help me
On Thursday 18 September 2008 16:26:43 Erik Trulsson wrote:
On Thu, Sep 18, 2008 at 03:49:37PM +0300, Robert Lebovich wrote:
I'm trying to install freeBSD on my pc, but after the installation it
doesn't boot. It can't find the kernel.
I think it is the problem with my partitioning. i'm
Mel wrote:
that's aside from the fact that the root partition '/' always has to be the
first partition, for the simple reason that everything else is mounted on top
of it.
For the same reason:
/dev/ad1se /usr/local
/dev/ad1sf /usr
will not work.
For this particular case (root