This doesn't look like a problem. hda4 would have been a 4th primary
pertition. After hda3, your remaining partitions are logical ones,
sitting on an extended partition. Unless you appear to have a bunch of
space missing, everything appears normal. I lot of systems only have a
single primary and the rest are logicals sitting on an extended. It
doesn't make much difference as long as it is done properly.
/boot will be located on /dev/hda1 = the root filesystem. No apparent
problem here either.
KevinO
Victor Odhner wrote:
>
> Setting up a Debian system, I have /dev/hda with the following
> partitions:
> 1 / 123.38 MB
> 2 /usr 1126.87 MB
> 3 /home 2401.79 MB
> 4 ?
> 5 /swap 65.81 MB
> 6 /tmp 148.06 MB
> 7 /var 501.75 MB
> 8 /work 2130.35 MB
>
> Partitioning seems to have skipped assigning /dev/hda4.
>
> Q1: Is this significant?
>
> I've seen references to a partition called /boot.
> My understanding is that the whole system can
> be a single partition if I wish, so I presume
> /boot can be a mount-point within the root partition.
>
> Q2: Do I need to do anything about /boot, or should
> it just appear?
>
> Vic
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--
Kevin O'Connor
"People will be free to devote themselves to activities that are fun,
such as
programming, after spending the necessary ten hours a week on required
tasks
such as legislation, family counseling, robot repair and asteroid
prospecting.
There will be no need to be able to make a living from programming."
The GNU Manifesto - Copyright (C) 1985, 1993 Free Software Foundation,
Inc.