Why such a large system partition? -walter
On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 6:17 PM, Mitch Bradley<[email protected]> wrote: > This is a request for comments on a proposed disk layout for XO-1.5. > > XO-1.5 will have "managed NAND" instead of raw NAND, so we can use > conventional filesystems instead of e.g. JFFS2. > > Proposal: > > The internal NAND storage will be partitioned with an FDISK partition > map, into three partitions: > > /boot - 50 MB - FAT16 > Contains olpc.fth, vmlinuz, initrd, and any other files that OFW > needs to access during booting > > / - 2 GB - ext4 > Contains system files > > /home - remainder of storage - ext4 > Contains user files > > Dual-boot systems might have additional partitions for Windows. That > will probably require storage devices > 4GB. > > The partitions will be aligned to at least 1 MiB boundaries, ensuring > that they do not split internal NAND erase blocks. > > The choice of FAT for /boot makes it usable for both Linux and Windows. > The choice of FAT16 avoids any possible patent issues surrounding > FAT32. FAT16 works fine for 50 MB partitions, using a 1K cluster size. > With larger cluster sizes, there are several factors of two of headroom > - and large clusters are not a problem for /boot, which tends to contain > mostly large files. > > > > _______________________________________________ > Devel mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/devel > -- Walter Bender Sugar Labs http://www.sugarlabs.org _______________________________________________ Devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/devel
