Am 21. Sep, 2001 schwätzte Kurt Granroth so: > 1. Run 'fdisk -l' to discover the partitions. The first DOS one is tagged > the C: drive > 2. The size of the C: partition is checked to make sure there is enough room > for the temp files. If there isn't (or if there is no C: drive), then it > will still run but no settings will be saved. > 3. The C: drive is mounted and two files are 'dd if=/dev/zero'ed. > 4. The first file is mkswap'ed into a swap file and the second is mke2fs'ed > into a filesystem (containing /home, mostly) > 5. On bootup, the filesystem is mounted with the loopback option Most cool. Thanks for the rundown! BTW, can they add ext2 and reiser support for the tmp files? Back when I first tried SuSE I used the LiveEval CD. It booted and congratulated me for not having m$ on the box. Duh. I was running slackware :). I just wanted to check out SuSE and didn't have enough room for dual boot. Eventually I moved completely to SuSE and used it for a couple of years. I got tired of them losing my subscription and discovered apt-get, so moved to debian. ciao, der.hans -- # der.hans@LuftHans.com home.pages.de/~lufthans/ www.DevelopOnline.com # When I work, I work hard. When I play, I play hard. # When I sit, I sleep. - Embe Kugler