U can use gparted to partition ur disk as ur desire. I wud recommend at 
least 4 partitions of 100 each. U cud have ext3 on all of them or use 
reizerfs (another jfs), fat, etc depending on ur need. I usually have a 
fat32 partition which I share between the linux and the pre-installed 
vista. This is no longer necessary with tools like ExtIFS 
(http://www.fs-driver.org/). I think u can read/write on an ext3 as 
well. I usually avoid writes from windows since it results in file 
system checks when booting into linux.

U cud use a stable Ubuntu 7.10 live CD for gparted (the one on hardy is 
a little dicey) or if u have a distro already on ur box u shud be able 
to fetch the tool using any package manager now.

Saifi Khan wrote:
>
> On Mon, 14 Apr 2008, Ashish Sheth wrote:
>
> > Date: Mon, 14 Apr 2008 15:00:39 -0000
> > From: Ashish Sheth <[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> <mailto:ashish_sheth_2005%40yahoo.co.in>>
> > Reply-To: <[email protected] 
> <mailto:twincling%40yahoogroups.com>>
> > To: <[email protected] <mailto:twincling%40yahoogroups.com>>
> > Subject: [twincling] external disk
> >
> > hello friends,
> >
> > i bought a external disk to keep my data and it is size is 400gb.
> > please tell me good way to partition the disk for use with linux.
> >
> > cheers
> > Ashish
> >
>
> Interesting. i recently bought a 500 GB IDE disk, casing and USB-IDE
> converter. Then i assembled it to make an external USB disk.
>
> Here are some test results formatting a single partition.
>
> 1. format with NTFS : 12 hrs 34 minutes
>
> 2. format with mkfs.ext3 -j option : 11 minutes
>
> My suggestion, go with ext3fs with journal (-j) option.
>
> Hope this helps.
>
> thanks
> Saifi.
>
>  

Reply via email to