AW: slink -> potato
Hi,
I usually do my installs like this:
/ -- 100 MB
/boot -- 24 MB
/usr -- 1200 MB
/usr/lib -- 800 MB
/var -- 200 MB
-- if wanted
/opt -- as wanted
but the last time I used a different partioning:
/ -- 2400 MB
/boot -- 24 MB
thats all
I'm not sure though if this is better or worse or if there is any
diffenrence at all
+---------------------------------+
| chris |
| ------------------------------- |
| database design & programming |
| agentur fiedler / video.de |
| |
| madram@video.de |
+---------------------------------+
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Ross Boylan [mailto:RossBoylan@stanfordalumni.org]
Gesendet: Freitag, 21. Januar 2000 09:57
An: Eric G . Miller; Debian-User List
Betreff: Re: slink -> potato
The thing is that various partitioning schemes suggest having one small
disk for the boot system and a larger one for the other stuff. The install
process creates these as / and /usr.
So /var, which can be a hog, ends up on the little partition.
In the past I've used a symlink to get around this, but in my recent
installs I've just been leaving it be. I hope I don't get a rude surprise
when doing a big apt-get....
Perhaps there should be a tip about this, or some default behavior that
fits better?
At 07:23 PM 1/20/00 -0800, Eric G . Miller wrote:
>On Thu, Jan 20, 2000 at 06:43:08PM -0800, Nick Jennings wrote:
>> This brings up a question that i've had for sometime, but haven't
>> yet asked anyone.
>>
>> Why the hell does Debian insist on putting some very disk space
>> consuming directories in /var ?? such as:
>>
>> /var/ftp
>> /var/cache
>> /var/lib/dpkg
>
>I suggest reading http://www.pathname.com/fhs/ . The /var partition
>holds "variable" data. Hence it can become very large. The /usr
>partition is for executables, libraries, etc... from the distributor --
>files that should rarely change (with a stable distro). In fact, it may
>be wise to segment /var depending on the type of system use.
>--
>+----------------------------------------------------+
>| Eric G. Miller egm2@jps.net |
>| GnuPG public key: http://www.jps.net/egm2/gpg.asc |
>+----------------------------------------------------+
>
>
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