"Jordan K. Hubbard" wrote:
> 
> > The first time I installed freebsd, I picked numbers that were
> > a little larger than the defaults for '/' and '/var', and still
> > found myself needing to redo the entire installation in less
> > than a week because /var was too small.  That was fine enough
> 
> And as you've seen by subsequent discussion, it's impossible
> to derive a "one size fits all" solution for something like /var.
> 
> I would expect this to come out of the "I know where you want it, now
> what kind of install will this be?" question which the newbie
> installer gets to answer second.  If they pick "mail server" from
> the menu then /var will get a totally different ratio % assigned
> to it.  If they pick "personal workstation" then 20MB is, if anything,
> perhaps a little high.
> 
> > Or are you saying that the newbie option would just use the
> > entire disk as one partition (the way that MacOS 10 server
> > does...)?
> 
> No, that's evil for a lot of reasons which I won't go into here. :)

I don't agree... A small /, and a huge /usr, with an additional var
symlink, shouldn't cause any troubles to newbies, and avoid some
problems. I think that the "use all available space" option ought to do
this.

--
Daniel C. Sobral                        (8-DCS)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

        One Unix to rule them all, One Resolver to find them,
        One IP to bring them all and in the zone bind them.


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