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author | Matthew Lemon <matt@matthewlemon.com> | 2022-07-19 11:13:28 +0100 |
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committer | Matthew Lemon <matt@matthewlemon.com> | 2022-07-19 11:13:28 +0100 |
commit | f916fc4e7902308d1b499ed5f37d519446dbe7dd (patch) | |
tree | 6ec0c868c2271e47e11678250bd477899974d0d6 /content/blog/openbsd_partition.md | |
parent | 6808489f1bf0f653859bc46136d4b74bf7ce8570 (diff) |
first implementation of blog posts sorted by category
Diffstat (limited to 'content/blog/openbsd_partition.md')
-rw-r--r-- | content/blog/openbsd_partition.md | 1 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/content/blog/openbsd_partition.md b/content/blog/openbsd_partition.md index 9b0ebcd..753c03e 100644 --- a/content/blog/openbsd_partition.md +++ b/content/blog/openbsd_partition.md @@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ date: 2022-07-17T07:46:14+01:00 slug: create_new_partition_openbsd draft: false tags: ['openbsd'] +categories: ["Computing"] --- 1. When I installed OpenBSD, the autoinstaller created a partition table for me. Interestingly (and I only just discovered this), it left a percentage of the disk free. This is a brilliant strategy, because it saves you having to do a lot of annoying resizing when you want to change things. In my case, I wanted to add a new partition of about 10G or so, for a `/jails` thing - check out [https://www.tubsta.com/2020/01/creating-a-chroot-in-openbsd/](https://www.tubsta.com/2020/01/creating-a-chroot-in-openbsd/). |