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GNU Parted ---------- GNU Parted is a program for manipulating partition tables. WARNING: USING PARTED TO PERFORM FILE SYSTEM OPERATIONS IS NO LONGER SUPPORTED ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Parted (post-2.4) no longer has the ability to create and modify file systems. Use file-system-specific tools to create and operate on file systems. For example, use the e2fsprogs programs to operate on ext2, ext3 and ext4 file systems. Use programs from the reiserfsprogs package if you want to manipulate reiserfs file systems. Although Parted lets you do some of the same things, the file-system-related code in parted is not as robust as the code in more specialized, FS-specific packages. Most FS-related functionality was removed after Parted 2.4. Thus, the following commands are no longer supported: mkpartfs, mkfs, cp, move, check, resize. See the file NEWS for a list of major changes in the current release. * documentation is in the doc/ directory. The User's documentation is in texinfo format, and is built into a format viewable by info/pinfo when you run make. To view the distributed texinfo documentation, run this: $ info -f parted.info Or view it on-line at: http://www.gnu.org/software/parted/manual/parted.html * the GNU Parted home page is http://www.gnu.org/software/parted * the GNU Parted FAQ can be found at http://www.gnu.org/software/parted/faq.html * send bug reports, requests for help, feature requests, comments, etc. to bug-parted@gnu.org. For any copyright year range specified as YYYY-ZZZZ in this package note that the range specifies every single year in that closed interval. NOTE TO DISTRIBUTIONS --------------------- (1) When compiling Parted for distribution for general use, we recommend using the default configuration: CFLAGS=-Os ./configure This includes --enable-debug (by default), which contains many assertions. Obviously, these "waste" space, but in the past, they have caught potentially dangerous bugs before they would have done damage, so we think it's worth it. Also, it means we get more bug reports ;) (2) When doing dependencies, remember that libreiserfs is a *soft* dependency, so I guess that means Debian-look-alikes should do a "suggests", but not a "requires". (3) When space is important, we suggest --without-readline, --disable-shared, and possibly --disable-nls and --disable-dynamic-loading.