Installation guide

Figure 25.9. Disk Drive With an Unused Partition
In Figure 25.9, “Disk Drive With an Unused Partition”, 1 represents an unused partition and 2
represents reallocating an unused partition for Linux.
If you find yourself in this situation, you can use the space allocated to the unused partition. You
first must delete the partition and then create the appropriate Linux partition(s) in its place. You
can delete the unused partition and manually create new partitions during the installation pro-
cess.
1.4.3. Using Free Space from an Active Partition
This is the most common situation. It is also, unfortunately, the hardest to handle. The main
problem is that, even if you have enough free space, it is presently allocated to a partition that is
already in use. If you purchased a computer with pre-installed software, the hard disk most likely
has one massive partition holding the operating system and data.
Aside from adding a new hard drive to your system, you have two choices:
Destructive Repartitioning
Basically, you delete the single large partition and create several smaller ones. As you
might imagine, any data you had in the original partition is destroyed. This means that mak-
ing a complete backup is necessary. For your own sake, make two backups, use verification
(if available in your backup software), and try to read data from your backup before you de-
lete the partition.
Caution
If there was an operating system of some type installed on that partition, it
needs to be reinstalled as well. Be aware that some computers sold with pre-
installed operating systems may not include the CD-ROM media to reinstall the
original operating system. The best time to notice if this applies to your system
is before you destroy your original partition and its operating system installa-
tion.
After creating a smaller partition for your existing operating system, you can reinstall any
software, restore your data, and start your Red Hat Enterprise Linux installation. Fig-
ure 25.10, “Disk Drive Being Destructively Repartitioned” shows this being done.
1.4. Making Room For Red Hat Enterprise Linux
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