: Partitioning advice (/usr and /home)
Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2003 13:15:47 +0200
Michael Vondung wrote:
I'm trying to figure out a decent partitioning layout for a
workstation. The system has an ~80GB disk. After /, /var, /tmp and
swap, I have 70GB left. I'm wondering how to split these between /usr
and /home
Michael Vondung wrote:
I'm trying to figure out a decent partitioning layout for a
workstation. The system has an ~80GB disk. After /, /var, /tmp and
swap, I have 70GB left. I'm wondering how to split these between /usr
and /home. Ironically, it is more space than I seem to need. The box
has
On Mon, 15 Sep 2003 12:27:37 +0200, Michael Vondung
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
I'm trying to figure out a decent partitioning layout for a workstation.
The
system has an ~80GB disk. After /, /var, /tmp and swap, I have 70GB left.
I'm wondering how to split these between /usr and /home.
I'm trying to figure out a decent partitioning layout for a workstation. The
system has an ~80GB disk. After /, /var, /tmp and swap, I have 70GB left.
I'm wondering how to split these between /usr and /home. Ironically, it is
more space than I seem to need. The box has only one user (me), I
Michael Vondung [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Backup matters aside, is there a significant advantage of having a separate
/home partition at all? If not, just skipping /home and using 70GB for /usr
(including /usr/home) might be the most practical and flexible approach?
If it's not a server,
On Mon, Sep 15, 2003 at 08:30:15AM -0400, Jud wrote:
On Mon, 15 Sep 2003 12:27:37 +0200, Michael Vondung
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
Backup matters aside, is there a significant advantage of having a
separate
/home partition at all? If not, just skipping /home and using 70GB for
/usr