* robert jorgenson (snoogans@qwest.net) wrote: > but i was just wondering what people recomend ... i have never partitioned > a disk myself ... i dont know what partitions i need to have or what i > should have. [...] This question has good potential for endless drainage. / can exist on <500Mb, I find 750-1000Mb sufficient to hold /bin and /sbin (so your system can operate in single user) and junk in /root. With regard to security, it's good form to seperate your temporary filesystems from / such that a full temp dir doesn't bring operations to a halt. /dev/mydiskN /tmp 500-1000Mb All the new software you install will live on /usr, leave room to grow. /dev/mydiskN /usr 2000-4000Mb I think 3G might be a sweetspot there, even for two desktop environment systems. /dev/mydiskN /var 500-2000Mb This one is tricky, it's good to isolate /var for keeping logs from overflowing your root, but you don't want to waste too much disk (unless you have it to spare...) You may want to consider allocating space for /var/tmp also, or at least symlinking it to /tmp if it's not already (debian does waht?). And usually after all this, /home gets basically what's left, or an optional /mp3 partition would be good too, just to keep your workspace in /home focused. What did i leave out? // JustMy.Cents = 2; PsychoAnalysis.Self.Cost = undefined; // priceless? // force that to proper PsychoAnalysis.Self.Cost = 0; // shouldn't hurt Gontran