> sda1 /        10Gb
> sda2 /usr   10Gb
> sda3 /var   10 Gb
> sda5 swap  1 Gb
> sda6 /tmp   1 Gb
> sda7 /home the rest of the drive....about 456 Gb

Every one has his favorite partitioning scheme (and prefers or avoids
LVM), so I won't delve into that, but in my experience, you'd be better
off adding /tmp's 1GB to the swap and then use tmpfs for /tmp.
You'll get slightly better performance (mostly because tmpfs doesn't
need to care about preserving a consistent filesystem in case of
a crash).


        Stefan


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