A couple of questions (background is below the questions if you want to
read):

Question 1: In the Debian manual it says a swap partition isn't needed but
recommended for efficiency.  Anyone else installed without swap and had
success?  Is my installation a ticking time bomb if I don't have a swap
partition?

Question 2: I've had recent clean Lenny installations on DBAN'd disks hang
at "activating swap file" upon boot up, where I needed to force shut down
the computer.  Without the separate swap partition this isn't an issue, so
is this the right solution?  These are completely fresh installs with no
other OS's so I can't imagine the swap partition being corrupt.

Additional background info:
I understand the purpose of the swap partition (in general).  On a recent
installation dual-booting with an exisiting xp installation, couldn't get
linux to install to the entire 14 GB free space I created via gparted;
instead it partitioned a section that it needed and added the remainder of
the space to the xp partition (when attempting to run update manager after
installing, linux ran out of disk space so I decided to try other
installation options).  So on the second installation (after deleting all
linux partitions and blanking with zeros), again had 14 GB free space but
this time I manually set up the partitions.  Not being very experienced at
this (always have used guided partitioning before), I set one logical
partition the size of the entire 14 GB free space - no swap partition, as I
couldn't see where to add that in via the partition options during
installation.  Installation went great, linux runs perfectly fine, with 2
primary partitions within the logical partition.

Thanks for any input.  This was actually for a Ubuntu install side-by-side
with xp, I hope this doesn't break any mailing list rules so I apologize if
it is considered off-topic.

Mark

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