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#1
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| Hello, After consulting my older brother (OS X developer, btw), I've decided to split my future X partition into four parts: One for the system, one for the "User" and one for the "Applications" folders and one for a classic optimized 9.1. I've also decided to have a partition for the OS 9 system and one for the OS 9 applications (6 partitions in all). Naturally, I want the User, X app and the 9 apps partitions to be mounted as folders at their respective places. The reason for doing this is mainly a safety precaution. I've been through too many hard disk crashes, and I've no effective backup system. Another reason is faster startup time if the system crashed and the startup drive must be checked for errors. Also, the mounted volumes will override the folders that normally exists there, and from what I gather from my brother, that data is unavailable until the HD is unmounted. Is this correct? It would be great; if the users and/or the applications volume(s) crashes, I can still log in to the system and use the standard apps. Ok, so what does it take to do this? I know I can, because my brother has a similar setup. I suppose all the X partitions will show up when I boot into 9.1, is there a way to hide them? Thx in advance, |
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#2
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| There's probably a lot of people who would like to know how to control the mount points for different partitions in OS X like you can in any other Unix OS. I would love to know how to do this... Maybe you could ask your brother (he is using OS X, not something like Linux, right?), and let us all know... |
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#3
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| _mnt_ and _fstab_ Drop into a terminal and read the man pages for "mnt" and "fstab". All your questions should be answered. Also, you might want to check out some of the HOW-TO files on LDP (linux documentation project) on mounting partitions into your directory tree. Hope this helps. Still waiting for my copy of OS X to arrive. |
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#4
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| Re: _mnt_ and _fstab_ Quote:
/Johannes |
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#5
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| Linux & X don't do things the same - you might want to check out one of the BSD-based web sites for that kind of data. Also realize that OS X does thigns a bit different than the others BSDs, so be careful. A simpler way to do what you what is to boot into single-user mode (hold down Cmd+S at startup) and create symlinks to these other volumes for the folders you want: i.e. ln -s /Volumes/Disk2/Applications Applications ln -s /Volumes/Disk3/Users Users Just a suggestion. |
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#6
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| Yeah, now that I've got my copy of OS X finally, and now installed, that's the exact route I went. I created a couple symbolic links rather than mucking around with the fstab file(s). |
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#7
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| But, what about... Quote:
) but, I can tell you that the symlink thing won't give you the "backup apps" access that jrydh's mount points solution would have. That may be acceptable to you guys (and I don't know how to start trying that solution in Ten yet), I'm just saying...-jab |
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#8
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| [shatner]But why?[/shatner] Seriously, why on earth would you want to split up a drive into multiple partitions? You won't save any disk space, in fact you'll waste some (or a lot). It makes no sense to me.
__________________ --- >80 column hard wrapped e-mail is not a sign of intelligent >life |
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