Results 1 to 3 of 3

Thread: Moving/home to a separate partition.

  1. #1

    Moving/home to a separate partition.

    Got a new laptop recently and have formatted the 500 GB hard drive as follows: sda1: 2GB Swap. sda2: 16gb, reiserFS, installed Knoppix on it. sda3 the rest, also reiserFs. One feature I missfrom Vanilla Debian was how easy it was to set-up separate root and home partitions, and while simply having sda3 allows me to actually use my internal hardd rive for media storage without needless bloating partimage back-ups of my knoppix install, I would like the seamlessness of making sda3 my home partition. Anyone know how I would go about moving /home over to sda3 and having it automount at /home everytime I boot?

  2. #2
    Okay, did some research and best I can tell, all I should need to do is move the contents of /home to /dev/sda3 and add an appropriate line in /etc/fstab for /dev/sda3. I've done this, and it mostly works, except with one hang-up: /dev/sda3 isn't mounting automatically at boot. Upon a fresh boot, /home is empty and the terminal acts like / is my home directory(it even links ~ to /). Running sudo mount -a mounts /dev/sda3 at /home and after exiting to the Adriane menu and returning to the shell, everything works just fine. here is the relevant line from my /etc/fstab: /dev/sda3 /home reiserfs defaults,auto 0 0 My fstab otherwise remains unaltered from the knoppix default. Any ideas as to what's wrong?

  3. #3
    Senior Member registered user
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Posts
    512
    Hi Jeffery Mewtamer,

    at the end of configuring Knoppix the commands inside the file /mnt-system/$knoppix_dir/knoppix.sh are executed if it exists.

    If you have got an HDD install of Knoppix the directory /mnt-system does not exist. You could simulate its existence by creating a link to your root directory on /dev/sda2.
    Code:
    cd /
    sudo ln -s . mnt-system
    Then you could create a file /KNOPPIX/knoppix.sh containing the command
    Code:
    mount -t reiserfs /dev/sda3 /home
    After reboot the home directory of the user knoppix should be in the right place.

    Regards.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


Macintosh Platinum Mouse - Apple 128K 512K 512Ke Mac Plus Lisa IIe M0100 - NEW picture

Macintosh Platinum Mouse - Apple 128K 512K 512Ke Mac Plus Lisa IIe M0100 - NEW

$44.99



1984 APPLE MACINTOSH 128K 40th Anniversary MATCHING # BOX Set 1st Mac M0001 NICE picture

1984 APPLE MACINTOSH 128K 40th Anniversary MATCHING # BOX Set 1st Mac M0001 NICE

$7999.99



Apple Macintosh 128k 512k Plus Analog Board Capacitor Re-Cap Kit - US Shipping picture

Apple Macintosh 128k 512k Plus Analog Board Capacitor Re-Cap Kit - US Shipping

$23.95



Macintosh Platinum Mouse - Apple II, IIe, 128K 512K 512Ke Mac Plus M0100 - New picture

Macintosh Platinum Mouse - Apple II, IIe, 128K 512K 512Ke Mac Plus M0100 - New

$35.99



1984 Apple Macintosh 128K Mac EARLY FIRST Version RFI Foil Motherboard Shield  picture

1984 Apple Macintosh 128K Mac EARLY FIRST Version RFI Foil Motherboard Shield

$29.99



Vintage Apple Macintosh Classic 128K Game Pack 3 On New 400K Double Density Disk picture

Vintage Apple Macintosh Classic 128K Game Pack 3 On New 400K Double Density Disk

$39.99



1984 Apple Macintosh 128K Mac 512K RFI Foil Motherboard Shield 805-0577 REV. D picture

1984 Apple Macintosh 128K Mac 512K RFI Foil Motherboard Shield 805-0577 REV. D

$24.99



Vintage Apple lle 128k Enhanced Computer A2S2064 Rebuilt W/ Disk Drive & more picture

Vintage Apple lle 128k Enhanced Computer A2S2064 Rebuilt W/ Disk Drive & more

$359.99



Apple M0120 Keypad Keyboard for Macintosh 128k 512k Plus - FULLY TESTED picture

Apple M0120 Keypad Keyboard for Macintosh 128k 512k Plus - FULLY TESTED

$99.99



Apple Macintosh 128K M0001 Computer with Mouse, no keyboard. Case included. 1984 picture

Apple Macintosh 128K M0001 Computer with Mouse, no keyboard. Case included. 1984

$510.41