Editing Partitions; Deleting A Partition; X86, Amd64, And Intel® Em64T Boot Loader Configuration - Red Hat ENTERPRISE LINUX 3 - INSTALLATION GUIDE FOR X86-ITANIUMTM-AMD64 AND INTEL EXTENDED MEMORY 64 TECHNOLO Installation Manual

Installation guide for x86, itanium, amd64, and intel extended memory 64 technology (intel em64t)
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Chapter 4. Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux
as there is no need to
recommended.
physical volume (LVM) — Creating one or more physical volume (LVM) partitions allows you
to create an LVM logical volume. LVM can improve performance when using physical disks. For
more information regarding LVM, refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux System Administration
Guide.
software RAID — Creating two or more software RAID partitions allows you to create a RAID
device. For more information regarding RAID, refer to the chapter RAID (Redundant Array of
Independent Disks) in the Red Hat Enterprise Linux System Administration Guide.
swap — Swap partitions are used to support virtual memory. In other words, data is written to a
swap partition when there is not enough RAM to store the data your system is processing. Refer to
the Red Hat Enterprise Linux System Administration Guide for additional information.
vfat — The VFAT file system is a Linux file system that is compatible with Microsoft Windows
long filenames on the FAT file system. This file system must be used for the
on Itanuim systems.

4.17.6. Editing Partitions

To edit a partition, select the Edit button or double-click on the existing partition.
Note
If the partition already exists on your hard disk, you can only change the partition's mount point. To
make any other changes, you must delete the partition and recreate it.

4.17.7. Deleting a Partition

To delete a partition, highlight it in the Partitions section and click the Delete button. Confirm the
deletion when prompted.
For further installation instructions for x86, AMD64, and Intel® EM64T systems, skip to Section 4.18
x86, AMD64, and Intel® EM64T Boot Loader Configuration.
For further installation instructions for Itanium systems, skip to Section 4.19 Network Configuration.
4.18. x86, AMD64, and Intel® EM64T Boot Loader Configuration
To boot the system without a boot diskette, you usually need to install a boot loader. A boot loader
is the first software program that runs when a computer starts. It is responsible for loading and trans-
ferring control to the operating system kernel software. The kernel, in turn, initializes the rest of the
operating system.
The x86-based installation program provides two boot loaders for you to choose from, GRUB and
LILO.On AMD64- and Intel® EM64T-based systems, only the GRUB boot loader is provided.
2. The
application is used to check the file system for metadata consistency and optionally repair one or
fsck
more Linux file systems.
2
the file system. The ext3 file system is selected by default and is highly
fsck
37
partition
/boot/efi/

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