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тАО10-14-2003 04:37 PM
тАО10-14-2003 04:37 PM
Solved! Go to Solution.
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тАО10-14-2003 04:59 PM
тАО10-14-2003 04:59 PM
SolutionIf you mean to mount another filesystem as "/" whilst on a running system (ick!), then the answer isn't so simple.
If you've got no other subsiduary mounts (except your new root), you can toy with the 'pivot_root' command (beware, it's kinda dangerous to do on writable filesystems). This is what is used when you boot your system to swap the boot filesystem (or initrd) to be the physical root partition.
Can I ask why you would want to do this to a working, running system?
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тАО10-14-2003 06:00 PM
тАО10-14-2003 06:00 PM
Re: mount other disks or partitions to the / (root)directory
The linux server which we are currenlty using is not a production machine, as per the requirement we need to do some test cases like (mounting other partitions on root.. etc).
Regards
Jagadesh
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тАО10-14-2003 06:09 PM
тАО10-14-2003 06:09 PM
Re: mount other disks or partitions to the / (root)directory
There is no way you are going to be able to mount another filesystem over root on a running system, it just won't happen. However, as Stuart says, you can have plenty of filesystem mount within "/", like "/mymount" and "/another".
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тАО10-14-2003 06:59 PM
тАО10-14-2003 06:59 PM
Re: mount other disks or partitions to the / (root)directory
I heard that the latest SUSE distribution comes with LVM as default volume management, so (if it is true) the / filesystem should be contained in a volume group (like HP-UX systems) and extending it should (hopefully!) be easier.
Ciao
Claudio
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тАО10-15-2003 04:47 AM
тАО10-15-2003 04:47 AM
Re: mount other disks or partitions to the / (root)directory
/ (root)s on various disks, keep common data on a separate disk and then switch between them at boot time using approriate bootmanager settings.