Am 15. Oct, 2007 schwätzte Dazed_75 so: > This machine has an 80 GB drive. It originally had M$ XP Pro on it. I then > installed a prior version of ubuntu (it has been upgraded a time or two) but > still left some unpartitioned space on the drive.. Somewhere along the line > I started playing with Linux from scratch and added a 5GB partition for it. > I just used cfdisk to look at the drive and got the following: > > cfdisk 2.12r >> >> Disk Drive: /dev/sda >> Size: 80026361856 bytes, 80.0 GB >> Heads: 255 Sectors per Track: 63 Cylinders: 9729 >> >> Name Flags Part Type FS Type >> [Label] Size (MB) >> >> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- >> sda1 Boot Primary NTFS >> [] 31108.01 >> sda2 Primary Linux ext3 >> [/] 17116.81 >> sda5 Logical Linux swap / >> Solaris 3002.23 >> sda4 Primary Linux >> ext2 5000.98 >> >> Unusable 23795.74 >> >> > Any idea why that last 24 GB is showing as unusable? I seem to recall that > a drive can only have 4 primary partitions but am not sure that is true. Yeah, only 4 primary partitions on an IDE/PATA drive. I think the same limit holds for SATA. > Even if it is, there are only 3 shown as primary. Maybe the Logical > partition counts as one of the 4 but can contain multiple "partitions" > within it? Yeah, logical partition is a metapartition. In this case it looks like it's not taking the whole rest of the partition. Backup anything you want to save before mucking with the partitions. Boot on a live CD. Delete partition sda5, recreate it to use the entire rest of the disk and add a swap partition. mkswap on the new swap partition and update fstab. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.CiscoLearning.org/ # veni, vidi, wiki - I came, I saw, I documented