Greg Folkert said on Mon, Dec 01, 2003 at 06:19:12PM -0500: > root should only be enough to boot with...
> /etc = 45MB (with GConf taking 30MB of that) > /bin = 3.5MB > /sbin = 3MB > /lib = 35MB > /dev = 128KB > /root = 15MB or so > /proc = null > /tmp = 50K or so (not a separate filesystem until multi-user/services) > > / should equal the sum of them ~ 100MB. Adding for growth a bit... > That is why I say 200MB. > > These should all be separate partitions/drive/mountpoints > /usr > /usr/local > /var > /home > /tmp > /boot (personal pref) There are currently Debian packages which are needed at boot time which depend upon datafiles kept in /usr. discover is one of them, there may be more. In woody, therefor, a seperate /usr can cause problems. Does it gain you much? Why should /tmp be its own partition instead of symlinking /tmp -> /var/tmp? Is there any need for a /boot partition on modern hardware? Why do you like a seperate boot partition? I'm just curious as to the reasoning behind your partitioning scheme. M
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