ยท Walter Dnes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On Tue, Sep 04, 2007 at 10:45:15AM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote > >> You will always have a pretty good idea how much space / needs, it >> contains /bin, /sbin, /etc, /root and /lib. Unless oyu are in the habit >> of storing stuff in /root, 500M is plenty. So put / on a regular >> partition, everything else in LVM and your initramfs worries go away. > > s/LVM/a partition using the rest of the hard drive/
No way. For sure not a partition of size ~500 G. That's something you never ever do. >> The only thing you need worry about is where are you going to get a >> decent howto that explains the concepts. You are dealing with three >> layers of stuff on top of physical partitions and some docs out there >> are ... confusing. Once you get the picture fully, it's as easy pie and >> makes perfect sense. > > Remove the LVM layer and things become even easier. Does it? How do you have different filesystem types for different directories? How do you minimize the effect of a corrupted filesystem? >> Really, LVM is the answer to all those prayers you have been sending >> up to $DEITY for years :-) Exactly. I don't get why people try so hard to not use LVM. Alexander Skwar -- <Reed> It is important to note that the primary reason the Roman Empire fail is that they had no concept of zero... thus they could not test the success or failure of their C programs. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list