212 lines
7.6 KiB
HTML
212 lines
7.6 KiB
HTML
<html>
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<head>
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<title>JFS Root Boot HOWTO</title>
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</head>
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<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
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<center><h1>JFS Root Boot HOWTO</h1></center>
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Paul Larson <A HREF="mailto:plars@austin.ibm.com">plars@austin.ibm.com</A><br>
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v1.0, May 22, 2001 - Copyright © International Business Machines Corp., 2001
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<hr>
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1. <A HREF="jfsroot.html#1">Introduction</A><br>
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2. <A HREF="jfsroot.html#2">Assumptions/Prerequisites</A><br>
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3. <A HREF="jfsroot.html#3">Converting an ext2 based system to JFS</A>
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<li>3.1 <A HREF="jfsroot.html#3.1">Build the kernel with JFS support</A>
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<li>3.2 <A HREF="jfsroot.html#3.2">Create the JFS filesystem</A>
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<li>3.3 <A HREF="jfsroot.html#3.3">Copy the root filesystem</A>
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<li>3.4 <A HREF="jfsroot.html#3.4">Final setup</A>
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<li>3.5 <A HREF="jfsroot.html#3.5">Reboot</A>
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<A NAME="1">
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<h3>1. Introduction:</h3>
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This HOWTO describes a method for converting an ext2 filesystem based
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Linux system to one running entirely on IBM's Journaled File System (JFS).
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For further information about JFS and to download the latest version of
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JFS, please visit the JFS for Linux web site at
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<A HREF="http://oss.software.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/jfs/">http://oss.software.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/jfs/</A>.
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<A NAME="2">
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<h3>2. Assumptions/Prerequisites:</h3>
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Before we get started, there are two assumptions that will be made in
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this document:
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<li>You must already have Linux installed and running
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<li>You must have an empty partition, partitioned as type 83 (Linux).
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It doesn't matter if this partition is formatted or not, but we'll be
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reformatting it as JFS so be prepared to lose anything you might already
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have on it.
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<p>
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The examples in this document assume that you just have one big partition
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for your root filesystem and don't have separate mounts for /home, /usr,
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etc. It's ok if you do have separate partitions for those, but you'll
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need to have enough free space to copy those to the new jfs partition,
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and modify the /etc/fstab file to remove them or change the mount points as
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necessary. Finally, my root filesystem is on /dev/hda5 and the new
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partition that I'm going to format as JFS is /dev/hda6. This is system
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specific though, so you'll need to substitute the right partitions from
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your system.
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<p>Something else to consider is that we will need to patch and recompile
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the kernel to add support for JFS. This isn't hard to do, but if you've
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never recompiled a kernel before, this probably shouldn't be your first
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experience with it.
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<A NAME="3">
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<h3>3. Converting an ext2 based system to JFS</h3>
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No commercial Linux distributions have picked up JFS yet, as it is still
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in beta. Hopefully soon, building a pure JFS system will be as easy as
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selecting to format your partitions as JFS when you install your
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favorite Linux distribution, but for now this procedure is the easiest
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way to create a system running on JFS.
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<p>
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The following sections describe the steps necessary to build a JFS root
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filesystem and boot from it.
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<A NAME="3.1">
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<h3>3.1 Build the kernel with JFS support</h3>
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Download the latest 2.4.x kernel from <A HREF="ftp://ftp.kernel.org">ftp.kernel.org</A>,
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and the latest jfs-x.y.z-patch.tar.gz from the
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<A HREF="http://oss.software.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/jfs">JFS for Linux</A>
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web site to /tmp. Extract them into separate subdirectories. Change
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directory into the base directory of the kernel source and patch the kernel.
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<pre>
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#cd /usr/src
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#rm linux
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#tar -xvzf /tmp/linux-2.4.3.tar.gz
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#mv linux linux-2.4.3
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#ln -s linux-2.4.3 linux
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#mkdir jfs
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#cd jfs
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#tar -xvzf /tmp/jfs-0.3.1-patch.tar.gz
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#cd /usr/src/linux
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#patch -p1 < ../jfs/jfs-2.4.0-v0.3.1-patch
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#patch -p1 < ../jfs/jfs-common-v0.3.1-patch
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</pre>
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Configure the kernel using make config, make menuconfig, or make xconfig
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(whichever you prefer). In the section labeled "Code maturity level
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options", turn on the item that says "Prompt for development and/or
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incomplete code/drivers." In the section labeled "File systems" turn on
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the option for "JFS filesystem support." Make sure to turn on JFS support
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so that it is compiled into the kernel, NOT as a module. Configure the
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rest of the kernel as needed for your system. Build the kernel with a
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<tt>make dep; make clean; make bzImage</tt> and if necessary,
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<tt>make modules; make modules_install</tt>. Then, copy the new kernel into /boot.
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<pre>
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#make dep
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#make clean
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#make bzImage
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#cp arch/i386/boot/bzImage /boot/vmlinuz-2.4.0-jfs
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</pre>
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Now we need to build the JFS utilities. These are the tools for formatting
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a JFS filesystem, checking it for errors, extending the size, and more.
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<pre>
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#cd fs/jfs/utils
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#make
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#make install
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</pre>
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Next, we need to add an entry for LILO so that we can boot with our new
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kernel that can use a JFS filesystem.
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Edit /etc/lilo.conf and add an entry for the new kernel similar to this:
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<pre>
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image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.4.0-jfs
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label=jfsboot
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read-only
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root=/dev/hda5
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</pre>
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Run <tt>/sbin/lilo</tt> to to activate the new configuration and reboot
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into the new kernel.
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<A NAME="3.2">
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<h3>3.2 Create the JFS filesystem</h3>
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Now that we have JFS support in the kernel, it's time to format our
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empty partition as JFS.
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<pre>
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#mkfs -t jfs /dev/hda6
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mkfs.jfs development version: $Name: v0_3_1 $
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Warning! All data on device /dev/hda6 will be lost!
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Continue? (Y/N) y
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\
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Format completed successfully.
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5120608 kilobytes total disk space.
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</pre>
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<A NAME="3.3">
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<h3>3.3 Copy the root filesystem</h3>
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This is an easy step and requires very little work on your part, but it
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will take the most time to complete. First, unmount any NFS, SMB, or
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cdroms that are mounted. Create a mount point for the new
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JFS partition and mount it. There are a few things to remember before we
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start copying files. Don't copy /proc over, but do create a mount point
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for it after you are done. If you didn't or couldn't unmount some of your
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NFS mounts or cdroms, remember to skip them when you do the copy. Copy
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everything else using <tt>cp -a</tt>.
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<pre>
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#mkdir /jfsvol
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#mount -t jfs /dev/hda6 /jfsvol
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#cd /
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#cp -a bin etc lib boot dev home usr var [...] /jfsvol
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#mkdir /jfsvol/proc
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</pre>
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<A NAME="3.4">
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<h3>3.4 Final setup</h3>
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Before we reboot into our new root partition, there are a just a couple of
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final things that need to be done. First, we need to change the /etc/fstab
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entry for the root partition, but you need to be certain to change the
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right one. Remember that the fstab file we want to work with is the one
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under /jfsvol/etc. So edit this file, and look for the line describing
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the root partition. Mine looks like this:
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<pre>
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LABEL=/ / ext2 defaults 1 1
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</pre>
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We want to change that to say:
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<pre>
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/dev/hda6 / jfs defaults 1 1
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</pre>
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You can now unmount /jfsvol.
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Edit /etc/lilo.conf to point to the new root partition. I'm
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paranoid, so I like to just copy and paste the one I already have for the
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jfs kernel and modify the root= line to point to the new partition.
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You'll also need to give it a new label. The new section on my system
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looks like this:
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<pre>
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default=jfsboot2
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...
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image=/boot/vmlinuz-2.4.0-jfs
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label=jfsboot2
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read-only
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root=/dev/hda6
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</pre>
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Make sure that you run 'lilo' again before you reboot.
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<A NAME="3.5">
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<h3>3.5 Reboot</h3>
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Congratulations! If you followed these steps, your system is now
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running completely on JFS. To verify this, type <tt>mount</tt> and you
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should see output similar to this:
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<pre>
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/dev/hda6 on / type jfs (rw)
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none on /proc type proc (rw)
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none on /dev/pts type devpts (rw,gid=5,mode=620)
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</pre>
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Assuming everything works well, and you don't want or need to go back to
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your old system, the old root partition can now be reformatted as JFS and
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turned into a /home mount, or anything else you want.
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</body>
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</html>
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