How about this: You install the OS on C:
You install SQL and everything else on the other partitions......
Now lets say you need install a raid. Well since you where smart and
installed everything on seperate partions you can move the data files onto
the raid that is accessed faster without having to reconfige any software.
Just by keeping directory structure and re lettering drives.
Steve
----- Original Message -----
From: "Benjamin S. Rogers" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Server" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2001 2:53 PM
Subject: RE: New Server...
> I've already responded to security side of the argument in depth so I'll
> shut up now. :) I will, however, continue to play devils advocate as far
as
> the reasons to use partitions. I just can't resist. :)
>
> > And besides the security
> > issue here, it is nice to organize things, so that administration is
> easier,
> > and it is also easier to pass the tasks on to someone else. If I know
> that
> > my sql files go one my d: drive, web content on the e: drive, etc, etc,
I
> > and anyone who does the job in the future will have a much easier time.
>
> This is a matter of preference. As a system administrator, I prefer to
walk
> up to a system and find all the applications installed into their default
> directory on the c drive. That invariably minimizes the time it takes my
to
> find what I'm looking for.
>
> > Also, say in the future I decide I really need a separate machine for
the
> > SQL server, or if I want to switch from say IIS to Apache, I can just
> > uninstall, and then format the partition, and reuse it.
>
> I guess I don't understand what your getting at since I don't understand
how
> deleting and recreating a partition will make it any easier to switch from
> one Web server to another. It seems to me that it would be easier/faster
to
> delete the directory in question than to reformat an entire partition.
>
> > If I have one big
> > partition, I either have to clear off EVERYTHING and start again from
> > scratch, or I have to try to uninstall the SQL/IIS server,
>
> Why would you have to uninstall the SQL server to switch the Web server?
How
> would partitioning the drive affect this?
>
> > along with all
> > the data, registry entries, backups etc, which we know will not be a
> clean,
> > non-problematic uninstall.
>
> Reformatting a partition will not clean up orphaned registry keys. Again,
I
> don't understand how backups and registry entries will be affected by
> switching the Web server as it pertains to whether or not the Web server
is
> installed on its own partition.
>
> > Partitioning is definitely the way to go, I doubt you will ever find an
> > Enterprise where the OS is on the same partition/drive as the web server
> and
> > content.
>
> I agree that partitioning is a great tool to employ, but I think the
> circumstances that necessitate partitioning are not as common as we would
> like to believe. Don't get me wrong, with Windows NT 4, we always created
> partitions, but all our reasons for doing so have been addressed with
> Windows 2000. Given that partitions are generally an unwarranted
> complication for us.
>
> Benjamin S. Rogers
> Web Developer, c4.net
> Voice: (508) 240-0051
> Fax: (508) 240-0057
>
>
>
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