on Sun, Dec 23, 2001 at 02:41:15AM +0000, Frank Copeland ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > On 22 Dec 01 23:44:12 GMT, Karsten M. Self <kmself@ix.netcom.com> wrote: > > > on Fri, Dec 21, 2001 at 02:39:39PM -0500, lee ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > >> Ok..I'm fairly new to linux and extremely new to debian (was mandrake > >> 8.1)..I'm attempting to install 2.2r2 on a 2 gig drive here and not > >> really sure where to carve this drive up. I'm planning on using this > >> box as a proxy for 6 other machines (combo of linux/98se). Linux docs > >> has a few articles on this but I thought I'd come straight to the > >> horses mouth to learn what might be best :-) > > > > 2 GB is a bit on the smallish side. > > 2 GB is perfectly adequate for the task. I ran far more than just a > proxy on 2 GB for years.
Agreed. It's small, but not inappropriate or inadequate for the task at hand. > > If you're using it as a proxy, I'd > > probably set up /, /tmp, /usr, and /var as separate partitions. > > Depending on what proxy services you're offering, you might want to make > > /var the bulk of the partitions (squid, ferexample, dumps its cache > > there). > > I'd avoid complicated partitioning schemes, especially if you have no > previous experience running a server with the sort of workload you are > expecting. ...ah, but that's where I stand in ;-) I'm running a gateway/proxy on a 2GB system, with a largely similar configuration (suitably mapped from an OpenBSD config). There _are_ specific reasons for splitting up the system as I'd suggested. First, the overall overhead is reasonably low -- about 25% of the disk, possibly less. And the hint for gpartd is probably well considered. Splitting out /usr may not be strictly necessary, but I'd still put /tmp and /var on their own partitions, as being able to contain their growth could be the distinction between a system that needs administrative intervention, and one that needs a hard reset. For a gateway, putting /usr on its own partition means you can mount this read-only, and partitions other than / and /usr as nosuid. This is a marginal amount of extra security, but may make the difference. > The rest can go into a single / partition. If this ends up bigger than > 500 - 600 MB, make the /var/spool partition bigger. ^^^^^^ ...for very small values of bigger? ;-) Peace. -- Karsten M. Self <kmself@ix.netcom.com> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/ What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? Home of the brave http://gestalt-system.sourceforge.net/ Land of the free We freed Dmitry! Boycott Adobe! Repeal the DMCA! http://www.freesklyarov.org Geek for Hire http://kmself.home.netcom.com/resume.html
pgpexE3uzT8ef.pgp
Description: PGP signature