On Fri, Mar 10, 2000 at 03:25:33AM +0300, Aleksandr A.Babaylov wrote:
> Yes, it's good.
> But it's better just mount partition on it's own place, no symlinks,
I disagree.
> such as:
> /dev/sd1s1f 3942238 2151773 1475086 59% /usr
> /dev/sd0s1g 985535 38016 868677 4% /usr/ports
> /dev/wd2g 2030095 1437551 430137 77% /usr/ports/distfiles
> /dev/sd0s1h 985535 155771 750922 17% /usr/src
In this example, you've hardcoded the size of /usr/ports,
/usr/ports/distfiles, and /usr/src.
What happens when the contents of these filesystems outgrow these limits?
You can't grow (or shrink) a ufs filesystem. So you need to add another
disk, and/or create symlinks in to another filesystem.
> and /local is not the best plase for out of the hier(7) things.
> use special partition for mount points:
> /dev/ad4s2h 455 39 380 9% /mnt
> glip:/mnt/d 4053998 3356969 372710 90% /mnt/d
> /dev/ad0 1056751 1021265 35486 97% /mnt/w
> /dev/ad4s2e 16183272 1135371 13753240 8% /mnt/e
You can do that. The precise name of /local is immaterial. For example,
you might want
/mnt/local/
/mnt/nfs
/mnt/smb
/mnt/ext2fs
and so on, depending on your precise requirements. The documentation I
posted is primarily internal notes for myself (and my hopefully soon to
be employees) rather than hard and fast rules that everyone has to follow.
Hopefully, though, in those notes, people will get ideas as to how best to
partition for their needs.
N
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