In Fedora9 or 10, enable EXT4 file system. A message says Fedora will use Ext4 File System by default. For details, see http://www.linuxidc.com/linux/2009-01/18168.htm. However, EXT4 file system support is the biggest highlight of Fedora9 or 10, but EXT4 is only an optional installation. If you directly enter the installation program, there is no EXT4 option. To enable EXT4, you need to press
Enable EXT4 File System in Fedora 9 or 10
In a message, Fedora uses the Ext4 File System by default. For details, see http://www.linuxidc.com/linux/2009-01/18168.htm. However, EXT4 file system support is the biggest highlight of Fedora 9 or 10, but EXT4 is only an optional installation. If you directly enter the installation program, there is no EXT4 option, to enable EXT4, You need to press the tab key on the installation startup option after the disc is started, and add the kernel option EXT4 on the command line to use EXT4 during installation. Note that EXT4 is still in the dev stage and Grub does not support EXT4 as the start partition. Therefore, if EXT4 is used for/partition, you need to separate/boot partitions and place them on non-EXT4 partitions, otherwise, the system cannot start.
After the disc is started, press the tab key on the installation and startup options, and then add the kernel option EXT4 on the command line. The EXT4dev option appears during partitioning.
Select EXT4 when installing Fedora on Hard Disk
Easy to add Parameters
The details are as follows:
Title Install Fedora 10
Kernel (hd0, 0)/isolinux/vmlinuz ext4
Initrd (hd0, 0)/isolinux/initrd. img