Ray Olszewski wrote: > At 03:14 PM 10/31/2004 -0700, mike wrote: > >> [...] >> I do use lilo. I have also been running a dual boot box with M$ and >> lilo has been writing to the master boot record. But this time it's >> all going to be Linux. I have a 30 gig harddrive so I would assume I >> would be safe if I kept the /boot partition within the first 500 >> megabytes of the drive. > > > That's a good bet, but the mappings on modern hard drives are so hard to > follow, and so idiosyncratic, that it's not a sure thing. It''s hard to > figure out where the BIOS thinks track 1024 ends ... and aside from > access to the kernel, know of no special benefit any partition gets > from being at the beginning of the drive. > > My practice ... which has worked 100% reliably for me with drives up to > 120 GB or so (I think I've even made it work with a 180 GB drive, and > drives over 134 GB or so have real BIOS problems)... is to make > partitions in this order: > > hda1 = /boot > hda2 = swap > hda3 = / (root) > hda4 = /home > > I'm not partial to using separate /var, /tmp, and /usr partitions ... > but if I were, I'd put them and /home in the extended partitions at hda5 > and up. > >
Hi Ray,
The reason I made /var a seperate partion is when I first started I had a small drive and read somewhere that /var/log could grow so big from logs (from miss a missconfigured system, which being a newbie's newbie at the time could likely happen to me :-) that it could render my system unuseable. I think I just made the others /usr,/tmp seperate because I made /var seperate.Which is probably not needed anymore now that I am more experienced (in some things anyways).
As far as I can tell, experienced, knowledgeable people still do not share a consensus on this issue. In part it depends, I suppose, on the specific uses that a system will see. In part, perhaps, it also depends on how the individual weighs the relative risks of each approach. That's why I characterized my own practice as no more than personal perference and habit, not a prescription for all to follow.
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