On Wed, May 16, 2001 at 11:47:45AM +0200, Philipp von Weitershausen wrote: > On Wednesday 16 May 2001 01:43, Ethan Benson wrote: > > install both disks and use cpio. i never reinstall the OS for > > something as mundane as a disk upgrade. > > Well, I never opened my Pismo but I'd think that there is only one IDE > connector... Anyone have experience with that?
whats the CDROM connected to then? i never bother to install both disks `correctly' i just have things haphazardly layed out on the table with cables everywhere ;-) it only takes a few minutes for cpio anyway. > I know, I know. I've read the flame wars that have been going on. The real > problem was that SuSE was pushing for Reiser (they employed Hans Reiser for > making his FS a journalling FS). I agree it should not be in the kernel right > now. regardless of whether it was whining or corrupt^H^H^H^Hporate pressure its disappointing linus lets that crap enter to his decisions. > I already have /usr as a separate partition. But how do you teach apt to > remount it read-write and then read-only again? add this to /etc/apt/apt.conf: DPkg { // Auto re-mounting of a readonly /usr Pre-Invoke {"mount -o remount,rw /usr";}; Post-Invoke {"mount -o remount,ro /usr";}; } > Why make / 64 MB big when making /tmp and /var as a separate partition? Both > could find place on that partition... because /var and /tmp have no business being on the root partition. they should be seperate partitions (or if you use 2.4 kernels /tmp should perhaps be tmpfs. anyone have any docs/info on advantages of this?) /var is for very variable data, in a crash its more likely to be damaged, so if its the same as root you can get a hosed root filesystem which is quite a bitch to recover from.. on the other hand a screwed up /var isn't that hard to repair. (unless /var/lib/dpkg gets screwed, but you should tar that off to somewhere every day in a cron) take advice from someone who is no stranger to massive filesystem corruption (and no a journaling filesystem would not have done dick to help me at the time, the kernel decided to eat the fs), splitting /var, /tmp, /usr, and /home is a VERY good thing, it makes recovery much easier to deal with. (even if / is the one that gets totally trashed). -- Ethan Benson http://www.alaska.net/~erbenson/
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