[wplug] partitioning
Chan, William
William.Chan at pacourts.us
Fri Apr 30 12:21:08 EDT 2004
If you are using RH, you can use LVM outside of /boot & swap for the
rest of your file systems which will allow you to change or extend them
in the future.
Bill Chan
-----Original Message-----
From: wplug-bounces+wchan=supreme.court.state.pa.us at wplug.org
[mailto:wplug-bounces+wchan=supreme.court.state.pa.us at wplug.org] On
Behalf Of Drew from Zhrodague
Sent: Friday, April 30, 2004 10:16 AM
To: General user list
Subject: Re: [wplug] partitioning
> > Swap - 1GB
> > / - 500 MB
> > /usr - 9 GB
> > /tmp - 100 MB
> > /home - 200 MB
> > /var - 9 GB
> > /boot - 20 MB
> >
> > I realize that some of these values are rather large given my
> > requirements but I'm also trying to get an idea of how others
partition
> > their servers for general use. Should some values stay static (i.e.
20
> > MB for boot) while others consume a % of available disk space (i.e.
30%
> > for /var)?
> >
> > As always all help is appreciated.
I setup lots of machines. If the thing is lucky, the
installation
and partitioning scheme will actually live for quite some time, as the
box
undergos changes in services, or purpose. I got sick of running out of
space in a partition a long time ago, I generally follow this general
partitioning scheme, /var be damned! Note that we do not use 1 and 2 gig
hard drives anymore, and running out of space is generally not an issue.
/boot 250m Redhat 9 wanted 250m, I don't care, personally.
swap .5-4g depends on RAM, whether it's gonna be busy, etc.
/ rest All of the rest of disk or raid.
It's tough to tell what each root directory's content is going
to
be, especially if you're going to be installing stuff asside from the
default scenario, so how can you really estimate the size?
Leaving everything in / is just so much more convenient for
setup
and longevity.
Also, if you're worried about losing data, or having some sort
of
partition-wide data loss, use multiple disks in a redundant filesystem.
--
Drew from Zhrodague http://www.WiFiMaps.com
drew at zhrodague.net Location Based WiFi
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