>
> like volume wise
>
> what is the space for /
> what is the space for /boot
> what is the space for /home
> what is the space for /usr
> what is the space for /var
> what is the space for /swap
> what is the space for /tmp
>
> thanks for the help in advance
If you use Red Hat, it will try to set up appropriate "server" partitions
for you, but it will fail:
/usr will be WAY too big
/home will probably be too big
/var will be WAY too small to accommodate any serious volume of qmail
traffic
I can say this with some confidence, because my server (using the 'standard'
partition sizes) has quite a bit of software installed on /usr, and is 90%
free, but after one week of qmail use, /var filled up (from both queue and
logs).
--joshua.