On Tue, 2 Dec 2008 10:56:44 +0100 (CET), Pieter Donche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > If FreeBSD is to put on the system as only operating system (Fdisk: > "A = Use Entire disk"), then will the BSD-partitions will show up as > ad0a (/), ad0b (swap), ad0d (/var) etc... correct or not (then what)?
You're mixing terminology here. :-) The "use entire disk" will create a slice for FreeBSD covering the complete disk. A slice is what MICROS~1 calls "primary partition". Now the conclusion: Let's say you create a slice on ad0, it will be ad0s1. Now you can create partitions inside this slice as you mentioned it, e. g. ad0s1a = /, ad0s1b = swap, ad0s1d = /tmp, ad0s1e = /var, ad0s1f = /usr and ad0s1g = /home. But if you're refering to ad0a, ad0b, ad0d etc. you're stating that there's no slice, implying that (if I see this correctly) it isn't possible to boot from that disk. Of couse, if you would intend to use a (physical) second disk for only the home partition, you could omit the slice and the partition and simply newfs ad1 - but that wasn't your question. ad0 |-----------------------------------------------| the whole disk ad0s1 \----------------------------------------------/ one slice ad0s1X \--/\---/\-----/\-----/\-------/\------------/ partitions a b d e f g / swap /tmp /var /usr /home mount point In case of "dual booting", you usually have more than one slice on your disk, but what happens inside the FreeBSD slice is mostly the same. > Page 427 of the FreeBSD handbook states that due to the use of 32-bit > integers to store the number of sectors is limited to 2^32 -1 > sectors/disk = 2 TB. A layout could be > a / 1Gb, > b swap, > d /root 20 Gb, (a /root partition is from an example of someone who > claims that at boot FreeBSD checks the partions in background except > for the / partition, by keeping / as small as possible, the time to > boot can be mimimized .. correct? but will /root ever be something > big ??) No no, / refers to "the root partition". One way of setting up püartitions is just to have one partition (one root parttion) and put everything on it, including /tmp, /var, /usr and /home. Another philosophy is to create partitions designated to their further use, just as I mentioned it above. For /, you would hardly need more than 1 GB. It just contains the kernel, basal system binaries, the configuration files and the directories that are mount points for all the other file systems. Even a 256 MB / partition should be enoung. > e /tmp 20 Gb, > f /var 20 Gb, > g /usr 20 Gb > this leaves 2420 Gb which is more than 2 Tb, so you can't put all > that in 1 filesystem h /home, you will need to split that in 2 > BSD-paritions, but since you can't have more that 8 BSD-partitions > (highest BSD-partition letter is h), you need to give up at least > one of d, e, f, g. ... correct or not (then what)? I quite doubt that FreeBSD's UFS 2 cannot handle a 2 TB partition as a whole, but because I don't have sch large disks with UFS (I have ZFS for them), I cannot tell. PS. Corrected subject (was missing). -- Polytropon >From Magdeburg, Germany Happy FreeBSD user since 4.0 Andra moi ennepe, Mousa, ... _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"