on Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 02:32:55AM -0500, Emma Jane Hogbin ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > I'd mostly call myself a "regular user" -- although I do have a web server > installed on my laptop it doesn't broadcast to the world...it's just me > the couch and the tv and occassionally the cat.
Hmm...I'd wondered where he'd gone.... <...> > I believe I came up with these numbers from a Red Hat book, although > many people have included their disk partition sizes on their web > sites. Myself included: http://kmself.home.netcom.com/Linux/FAQs/partition.html Note that partitioning is a pretty subjective issue. You can pretty much have any number of partitions from one[1] on up. Red Hat partitioning guidelines are almost certainly going to be biased in favor of a large root partition. RH seems to want a 250 MiB root for a 7.x install. You can do less, but it will complain. Debian uses a sparser root, which the old farts consider a better thing (less to go wrong). BSDers take this to an extreme. The argument in favor of fewer partitions is fewer decisions, less wasted/lost space, and easier overall management. The argument in favor of more partitions is more control, particularly selecting filesystems and/or mount options appropriate to the partition (nodev, nosuid, noexec, etc.). You're also increasing recoverability -- filesystem corruption is generally restricted to only a single partition. You also have the option of shuttling data to other partitions while doing maintenance or recovery. And if you create a spare bootable partition, you've got a fallback on the system in the event your primary boot goes pear shaped. > I know only of the linux laptop site, but many of the people > who've contributed info have included disk partition information: > http://www.linux-laptop.net/ > > Here's mine: > emmajane@debian:~$ df -h (-h = human readable sizes) > Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on > /dev/hda2 464M 28M 412M 7% / Note that you're only using 7% of this partition. That's a good 350 MiB wasted... > /dev/hda3 4.6G 2.1G 2.4G 47% /home Healthy. I generally give /home the remainder of space after allocating to all else. > /dev/hda5 2.3G 1.3G 901M 60% /usr Good. > /dev/hda6 464M 108M 333M 25% /var I tend to recommend 750 MiB - 1 GiB. You've split out /var/cache separately... > /dev/hda7 2.8G 46M 2.6G 2% /usr/local My experience is that /usr/local tends not to get used that much on Debian. Something about having 12k available packages all of which go to /usr.... > /dev/hda9 46M 13M 31M 30% /tmp Good, possibly a bit thin. I tend to give 64-256MB to /tmp > /dev/hda10 2.3G 334M 1.9G 15% /var/cache Hmm. Frankly, I'd lose this. If you can, roll the space back into /var and /home. parted may be able to resize your partitions. <...> > So today I filled up /var. Based on some great advice that got here I > decided to find the largest subdirectory and make a new partition just > for that directory. This freed up a good chunk of space (75% of the > partition) to be shared in the other sub-directories. A number of > people recommended cleaning out /var...464M isn't a lot to begin with. > I have virtually no logs and no mail. As you can see, there wasn't a > lot to clean out: > > debian:/home/emmajane# du --max-depth=1 -h /var > 12K /var/lost+found > 75M /var/lib > 334M /var/cache > 2.8M /var/backups > 1.0K /var/local > 1.0K /var/lock > 21M /var/log > 40K /var/run > 9.9M /var/spool > 10K /var/tmp > 1.0K /var/opt > 1.0K /var/mail > 10K /var/www > 441M /var > > (Note that the size of /var/cache is approximately the same size as > /dev/hda10 from above? This is because I moved /var/cache into that > partition but du reads it as if it were all the same...I think.) du reads the directories _in_ the directory you point it at. If you want to keep it on one filesystem, use the '-x' option. <good stuff snipped> IMO your end results are still a bit imbalanced. Not a huge deal, but keep it in mind as you go through this process again. Peace. -------------------- Notes: 1. One partition assumes either no swap, or use of a swapfile. -- Karsten M. Self <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/ What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? At the sound of the toner, boycott Lexmark: trade restraint via DMCA. http://news.com.com/2100-1023-979791.html -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]