On Monday 08 September 2003 08:50 am, Anne Wilson wrote:

> It works well if you know that you need to do it, but if you're there
> for the first time you don't find out until it's too late.  I made
> that mistake the first time installed, learned my lesson <g>

As much as I like the idea of the installer divvying up the disk into several 
partitions for functionality, I can't blame Mandrake for not doing that by 
default.  Deciding how big to make each different partition is as much an art 
as a science and highly dependent on the person, risk aversion and what 
function the system will be used for.  For Desktop linux, I don't see the big 
deal about using two big partitions, most people on the desktop don't really 
need to worry about separating partitions as much and it does offer greater 
flexibility when it comes to using a wide variety of different sizes for 
different <partitions> like /var, /usr, etc.  With everything on one big 
partition, they can all use as much space as they need from the primary 
partition.

Once you start doing server functions, of course, that all changes but 
Mandrake was aiming at desktop users, not servers, IIRC.

Automated splits would be much harder and would invariable be wrong for a 
sizeable portion of people leading to the same type of complaints about the 
installer.

-- 
Bryan Phinney
Software Test Engineer


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