Drop the "partion 9" for root installs

The original point of this partition had something to do with
bootloaders on Sun systems (per Richard Elling).  It is not necessary on
Linux.
Richard Laager 2017-08-06 01:10:06 -06:00
parent 04af7d29fe
commit d89556453d
3 changed files with 0 additions and 7 deletions

@ -62,7 +62,6 @@ If you have a second system, using SSH to access the target system can be conven
# sgdisk -n3:1M:+512M -t3:EF00 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
Run these in all cases:
# sgdisk -n9:-8M:0 -t9:BF07 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
# sgdisk -n1:0:0 -t1:BF01 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
Always use the long `/dev/disk/by-id/*` aliases with ZFS. Using the `/dev/sd*` device nodes directly can cause sporadic import failures, especially on systems that have more than one storage pool.

@ -74,9 +74,6 @@ If you have a second system, using SSH to access the target system can be conven
Run this for UEFI booting (for use now or in the future):
# sgdisk -n3:1M:+512M -t3:EF00 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
Run this in all cases:
# sgdisk -n9:-8M:0 -t9:BF07 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
Choose one of the following options:
2.2a Unencrypted or eCryptfs:

@ -72,9 +72,6 @@ If you have a second system, using SSH to access the target system can be conven
Run this for UEFI booting (for use now or in the future):
# sgdisk -n3:1M:+512M -t3:EF00 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
Run this in all cases:
# sgdisk -n9:-8M:0 -t9:BF07 /dev/disk/by-id/scsi-SATA_disk1
Choose one of the following options:
2.2a Unencrypted or eCryptfs: