why do we need to specify partition type in fdisk and later again in mkfs? (3 solutions!!)
Published 3 years ago • 2 plays • Length 3:09Download video MP4
Download video MP3
Similar videos
-
1:44
ubuntu: what is the partition type ('t' command) in fdisk good for?
-
8:21
creating and formatting partitions with fdisk and mkfs - bash - linux
-
16:39
creating partitions in linux using fdisk (and other tools)
-
2:43
fdisk: partition table "not in disk order" but "order is correct already"? and grub-legacy issues
-
2:03
when using fdisk, how do i find what partition numbers are already in use?
-
16:00
what does formatting actually do, anyway?
-
6:51
windows detected that the efi system partition was formatted as ntfs
-
7:10
should i partition my hard disk?
-
3:05
which partition should /usr be on (3 solutions!!)
-
2:07
what does sfdisk do, and how does it compare to fdisk or parted? (3 solutions!!)
-
2:57
deleted function in std::pair when using a unique_ptr inside a map
-
5:19
creating partition in linux using fdisk
-
5:54
fdisk, mkfs and mount command explained in redhat linux post disk added to os (english)
-
3:05
unix & linux: fdisk vs parted (3 solutions!!)
-
2:35
gpt partition shown in fdisk, but gparted shows no partitions
-
2:34
unix & linux: i know a partition exists (bootable) but i can't find it in fdisk (2 solutions!!)
-
2:18
can you change the partition type on a linux server without starting up fdisk? (4 solutions!!)
-
1:40
how to unlist partitions from fdisk command in linux? (2 solutions!!)
-
2:15
fdisk / sfdisk not saving partitions on usb drive
-
2:17
recover lost partitions ( or partition table) after fdisk in debian (2 solutions!!)
-
1:15
unix & linux: creating partition using parted instead of fdisk
-
1:15
in scripts is partx better than fdisk for reading partition table?