Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote: > On Thursday 16 February 2006 15:45, Alexander Skwar wrote: >> Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote: >> > On Thursday 16 February 2006 14:06, Alexander Skwar wrote: >> >> Izar Ilun wrote: >> >> > I say that, It'll be just: >> >> > - /boot >> >> > - swap >> >> > - /home >> >> > - / (all the rest) >> >> >> >> That's not advisable. I'd strongly suggest to create >> >> filesystems for /boot, swap, /home, /opt, /usr, /var >> >> and / (of course). This way you're more flexible >> >> and also a bit safer (not such a high risk of running >> >> out of space on /). >> > >> > and he wastes a lot of space, >> >> No, he doesn't. Where does he waste space? > > because you shall not fill up any partition more than 85% or fragmentation > will go up insanly and performance go down to the bottom.
Yes, but we're no longer in the age, where 10GB hard drives are high end. I do agree, that you might waste a little bit of space. But that's it. And that's only a theoretical value. Nothing to worry about in real life. >> > makes boot a lot longer >> >> Not really. > > yes, really. jaja. >> > and increases head >> > movement. >> > >> > One big / (like 40 or 80GB) will be enough >> >> Yes, and it's obviously the worst solution. How do >> you mount /tmp noexec? How do you mount /usr read-only? > > why should you mount /usr readonly, Because you normally don't need write access to /usr, unless: > if you do your emerging always everyday? ...unless, you're writing. > Why should he make /tmp noexec, Security precaution. >> > With that sizes, it is nearly impossible to fill / completly up. >> >> And it's impossible to have some flexibility. > > no, it is absolutly flexible Ah. Please explain how you mount /tmp noexec and /usr readonly. Please also explain, how you seperate data areas (like /var and /usr). >> > To put everything on its own partition was good, when harddisks were >> > 2gb-10gb big. >> >> And it's still good today. >> > no it is not I see. Strange thing is, that about every server and workstation I've seen more or less contradicts what you say. >> > But today it is just a waste of space and time. >> >> No, it's absolutely not. > > yes it is. It wastes space, Not really. Some. But not really. > makes boot much longer. No, it doesn't. Not noticeably, at least. > More partitions = more > haead movement = higher risk of damage. More partitions = more risk that one > of the partitions dies = more risk of fatal data loss. There's always backup. > More partitions = less space available Not really. Some. But not really. If you're *SO* low on hard disk space, I'd advice to buy more harddisks. > You see, there are a lot of good reasons to keep the number of patitions low. Actually, as *you* see, there aren't many reasons and no good reasons to do what you say. Alexander Skwar -- It is common sense to take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list