hi ya On Tue, 31 Dec 2002, Michael P. Soulier wrote:
> On 31/12/02 Nori Heikkinen did speaketh: > > > i just bought a new 80G hard drive. i should partition the whole > > thing, right? i'm thinking: > > > > /dev/hda1 -- / (Linux (83)) -- 100M (is this appropriate?) > > /dev/hda2 -- /usr (83) -- 1G (too much?) > > /dev/hda3 -- swap (82) -- 128M (i have that much physical RAM, and > > that should be sufficient, right?) should i make this > > hda1? > > /dev/hda3 -- /var -- 2 or 3 G, as per suggestion of [1] (i like apt) > > /dev/hda4 -- /tmp -- 50M-ish? > > /dev/hda5 -- /home -- the rest, all for me :) > > All you really need is swap and /. Making all these partitions ensures > that none can overflow into the other, but it's difficult to forsee exactly > what your needs will be. For example, I have a 100M /tmp partition, and I > thought that would be plenty. Then I started using VMWare. I'm running out of > /tmp space regularly now. > I really don't see a problem with just swap and /. partitions depends on you, your requirements/desires/experiences and application - no matter how big yu make your partition... - it will always be too small one day if single user mode is important to you ... you can always boot and fix your "broken" server by booting into a 64MB rootfs while the other 20GB or 100GB is fsck'd for some reason or other - a requirement i always want at least 6 partitions ( my quirks ) ( or some silly set of similar sizes ) - you dont need /boot in modern pcs that know how to get pass the first 1024 cylinders ( 500MB ) problem ( 500MB is plenty of room for your /bin /lib /etc /sbin /boot ) 64MB / 128MB /tmp 512MB /var 2048MB /usr 256MB swap rest /opt ( aka /home ) ( only /opt and /etc is backedup ) - the system disks should NOT change much in size after your done install and run your periodic updates if quick/simple backups of user data is important, and you want to assume that all your OS is already backed up... and you only want to back user stuff ( /home and /etc ) - you can restore /home and /etc onto any other system and you'd be up and running w/o any major issues if you d/l and install and compile lots of goodies - move /usr/local to /home/local where /home is the whole disk if you're running a mail server - move /var/spool/{mail,mqueue,clientmqueue} to /home where /home is the whole disk if you're running a web server - move /var/www to /home/www where /home is the whole disk more partition fun - lots o docs/comments/howtos http://www.Linux-1U.net/Installation/partition.gwif.html c ya alvin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]