Re: Bakit ako gagamit ng linux? anu ba advantage nito at ano ba ang mapapal
Sorry nakalimutan ko
Centos 6.5 32bit gamit ko CLI or minimal install lang..
Ganito ung situation:
1 physical and 2 logical volume
Volume1 - 50gb
Volume2 - 100gb
Balak kong gawin na 100gb ung Volume1 and 50gb ung Volume2 so ni reduce ko ung size ng Volume2.
After that, gumamit ako ng resize2fs command sa Volume1 which is successful pero nung tinry ko mag resize2fs sa Volume2 is my error.
Ang sabi eh hindi tugma ung superblock size sa physical size. Nag try ako ng fixes sa net which is ung e2fsck pero no luck.
Anu ba ang filesystem na ginamit sa volume1 at volume2?
I suppose you used ext3 or ext4 filesystem kasi resize2fs is only for that family of filesystem.
e2fsck wont help as it is only for checking the filesystem, not resizing.
Gaano ba kalaki ung harddrive?
I suppose na more than 150gb kasi, ngawa mo I-expand ung partition 1 from 50 to 100gb. Meaning may space pa infront of partition 1.
regarding partition 2, may laman na ba ito? at anu filesystem nito?
Baka more than 50gb na laman nun keya ndi mo na maresize?
A better solution, download
slacko, a variant of puppy Linux.
Install it in a usb drive.
Run it on your computer then run gparted.
Now, graphically manage your drives/filesytem with gparted.
Ang hirap kasi sa CLI, ndi ka man lang mkpgscreenshot.
Now, in case there are errors, kindly take screenshot, or copy the whole output (this should include the command you invoked that produced the error) from the command-line and post it in here.
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mga idol sa linux wala po bang ibang drive kung saan pede mag save ng mga files tulad ng sa ibang OS??
First, why do you need this?
Second, for any other purpose you have, the quick answer is YES!
The only thing is that you should have a BASIC KNOWLEDGE of the LINUX FILESYSTEM
first.
What you should know?
1. Drives on windows are much more known as "partition" on linux. therefor,
when you say drive C on windows, it might also be called "partition C" on linux.
2. There are no drive letters on linux like those on windows. There is no such thing
as drive C, drive D, etc. So dont look for that on linux. Linux has its own way of
representing "partitions" w/c differs on windows.
3. On windows, drives or "partitions" are represented as "separate" entities. Also,
windows automatically loads drives or "partitions" once detected. For example,
if you have a virus-infested usb drive and you plugged it on your windows computer,
viruses will hapilly get inside your system because windows will automatically load it.
Linux is not like that. You can imagine the Linux filesystem as one big tree.
And as a tree, the main part where everything starts is called the "root filesystem".
Like a real tree, the "root" holds all parts of the filesystem to form one, big
tree of files and directories.
Now, in order for "partitions" to be accessed by the linux system, it needs to be
"mounted" first.
The "main partition" that contains the system is mounted at the root partition at a
specific "mount point" represented by "/" .
So, you may always see directories on linux written like this:
/home/myname/documents
The "/" at the beginning means the root filesystem, and from there you'll find the home directory
and so on. No Drive letters. Other "/" aside from the beginning are mrely file separators.
On linuxmint, for example, you plugged in a usb drive and opened dolphin file manager
to browse your usb drive drive (supposing it is a 2GB usb drive) .
You may locate your usb drive specified by something like:
"2.0 GB Hard Drive"
Clicking it, you may see on the adress bar:
/media/myname/{Oksi83o4i598fc3040}
Again, no drive letters.
Your usb drive is automatically assigned and mounted at:
/media/myname
Meaning, in a linux filesystem, any other partition aside from the
"main partition" , to be accessible, should become part of the "tree"
and to be part of the tree, the "partition" should be "mounted" at a
specific "mount point", which means, a certain part of the tree.
There are no drive letters on linux because drive letters denotes
separate "filesystem hierarchy". Which is the opposite.
The linux filesystem is one big tree and each branch, or directory may specify
another partition. Therefor, no need for drive letters.
This approach is highly considered to give better data security.
If your confused, the best way to learn is to use a certain "user-friendly"
linux distro like LinuxMint or Ubuntu. Its to learn something you cant see
nor interact with.
Now, how can you create a separate "partition/drive" on linux? Its simple.
create a partition using your distro's graphical partition manager (not CLI
or Command-Line Interface).
Now, if you want your partition to be automatically mounted at a specific directory
at boot-time, just edit your fstab file.
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Ano po ba pinagkaiba-iba ng Ubuntu Desktop, Ubuntu Server, Ubuntu Gnome, Kubuntu, Xubuntu, Lubuntu, Edubuntu??
Tska halimbawa na nag dualbot ako sa linux at windows tpos nag recover ako sa windows, mabubura ba yung LinuxOS ko nun kahit nsa ibang partition sya? (di kasama sa recovery yung linuxos)
Ubuntu desktop is the main Ubuntu Distro w/c is desktop-oriented w/c uses Unity as its Desktop Environment.
Ubuntu Server is for server uses.
Ubuntu Gnome is another Ubuntu-based distro that prefers Gnome Desktop Environment over Unity.
Kubuntu is another Ubuntu-based distro that prefers KDE Desktop Environment over Unity.
LUbuntu Gnome is another Ubuntu-based distro that prefers LXDE Desktop Environment over Unity.
XUbuntu Gnome is another Ubuntu-based distro that prefers XFCE Desktop Environment over Unity.
Ubuntu Kylin is only for chineese users, you wont need it.
Ou, its possible na mabura ang Linux Distro mo kapag nag-Windows recovery ka.
Bkit kasi kelangan mag Windows Recovery?
If you really need still to do that, I suggest you to use CloneZilla to copy your Linux Partition and reinstall it as if it nothing happened.
Dito na IT naming keya I-google mo na lang?
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meron ako linux. Cylon Linux. Ano ba kagandahan nya sa ibang linux distro?
Nadinig ko na yan, kaso ndi ko pa natry. Sorry.