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Re: Installing
First of all , hi all
i was gone a long time. now im back.
On Wed, 23 Dec 1998, Ira Abramov wrote:
.|
.|On Wed, 23 Dec 1998, Peter L. Peres wrote:
.|
.|> On Wed, 23 Dec 1998, Nir wrote:
.|>
.|> > I'd like to install Rh5.2 on a brand new 6.4Gb.
.|> > Any recommendations for partitioning it ?
.|>
.|> imho do yourself a favor and put as many partitions on it as practically
.|> possible. Lots of people install in the grand Redmond way, one, big, and
.|> forever, only to work very hard later, to move and partition data when the
.|> disk fills.
.|>
.|> Minimum requirements are one swap partition, and one root partition. The
.|> root partition should start and end under the 1G limit for least problems.
.|> Above 1G do what you please. Having separate partitions for / /usr /home
.|> /home/ftp/pub/incoming /var/spool/mqueue and a few other things is very
.|> helpful later imho.
.|
.|all that is true if you are planning a server. /usr can be part of the
.|root but /usr/local is a very good candidate for a seperate partition,
.|same for all of /var and /home, /home/ftp if you are opening it for public
.|access. the redmond approach is just fine for a workstation though.
I would say 1G for / much to much.
If you want to have /var and /tmp under it, and planning to save lots of logs,
make it 300MB, if not, 90-120MB is much too. / isn't acualy holding something,
spacialy if you have /usr (300MB), /usr/local (600MB) and /export/home (1-2GB),
.|
.|
.|--
.|Ira Abramov ; whois:IA58 ; www.scso.com ; all around Linux enthusiast
.|`When you say "I wrote a program that crashed Windows", people just stare
.|at you blankly and say "Hey, I got those with the system, *for free*".'
.| (Linus Torvalds)
.|
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--
Guy Cohen <guy@spice.org.il>
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Woo, nice game. Linux is the source.