Technically all you need is a "/" partition. A SWAP partition is highly recommened; it's the equivelant of virtual memory on Macintosh or Windows. The others are all optional, so that if one partition gets wiped the others live, or sometimes it's just handy. For example, I have SuSE Linux dual-booted with Debian on this computer, but a seperate partition for /home/eric/documents from each OS. I also share it off with netatalk, so that weather I'm using Debian or SuSE, or my Mac box, I have the same "my documents" directory. I also have a server running Mandrake Linux with "/" "swap" and a seperate "/var/www" partition, so that if the OS fails or I have to reinstall/switch distros, I can reformat the system partition without losing my web server data. Cheers, SigmaChi
On Monday 22 November 2004 7:55 am, Lian Liming wrote: > Hi all, > This is a question from a linux newbie. I am quite confused with > linux hard disk partition. > Someone tell me that i just need three partitions: /boot, swap and /. > Some others tell me to separate /home from /. There is some another > suggestion that i should separate /var form /......... > > So is there a common rule to partition the hard disk? > > Thank you for any suggestions. -- Sarki Gwaggo/Little Dude/Little Bear/Shorty/Dory/Sigma Dude/SigmaChi/Scotchz/Doorhelp2/Pigme/Erikimo/Neilleo/Scotti.... A.K.A Eric Registered Linux user #: 366862 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]