Russell Coker <russ...@coker.com.au> writes: > On Thu, 22 Dec 2011, Goswin von Brederlow <goswin-...@web.de> wrote: >> PS: I myself like a seperate /usr but I wouldn't use it for my parents. >> I do want a seperate /var and /home for them though so they can't DOS >> the system by filling up their home. > > How would filling up /home DOS the system?
Filling /home doesn't but filling /var does. And if it is all one partition ... Prior to recent changes this also affected /var/run and /var/lock and so on. With /var being full you had problems booting. > The only common program I can think of which fails hard when it runs out of > disk space is Squid. I expect that some DB servers also have serious > problems No squid, no google or amazon anymore. Effectively (for the target audience) DOSed. > but I don't think that they will be running a DB server on their home > workstation. If the system runs out of space it can't spool the mail telling me the system is full. > My experience with systems I run for people who aren't computer experts > (which > includes my parents) is that filling /home causes various parts of their > desktop environment to cease working (thus effectively DOSing the system) and > they also just can't save files. > > I have a separate partition for /home on such workstations, but this is just > for ease of backups. MfG Goswin -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-boot-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/87obv09alm.fsf@frosties.localnet