Linux on a powerpc machine needs no partitions above and beyond what it needs 
on the Intel platform you're used to.

If however, your powerpc machine is a New World Apple (almost anything made 
since 1999) then the Apple platform needs two partitions more.  Fortunately, 
Debian sets this up for you automatically (and correctly) when the partitioner 
is run during installation.  They appear as the first two partitions on the 
disk; you don't even have to ask for them.

It is my practice to leave the first two partitions untouched.  The first is 
the Apple bit-map of disk use.  The second is the Open Firmware equivalent of 
the master boot record.  The third one I designate as "/".  

After that, I assign separate partitions as /usr, /var, /tmp, /home, and swap.  
This is the classic posix way of doing things.  The installer offers you other 
options on how to do this.

If you're not yet prepared to set up your own partitioning scheme, the defaults 
the installer offers will work just fine.

All my best,  - Chris Reich; Rochester, New York
twittername: chrisreich


 
--- On Wed, 8/19/09, Jason Hsu <[email protected]> wrote:

> From: Jason Hsu <[email protected]>
> Subject: Proper partitioning
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Wednesday, August 19, 2009, 10:10 AM
> What are the appropriate partitions
> for using Debian on a PowerPC?  So far, my partitioning
> experience has been limited to Puppy Linux and Damn Small
> Linux on a PC.  Does a PowerPC require certain things
> that a PC does not?
> 
> What partitions are you using on your PowerPC?
> 
> -- 
> Jason Hsu <[email protected]>



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