Agree with most of it except: > If you're going to have more than 1 distro on a machine, having a boot > partition is a good idea as it simplifies bootloader configuration. I'd have separate partitions for the whole distro and a partition for my home directory that I mount from either distro. Free advice, can't sue me... :) ET Matt Graham writes: > On 2014-07-11 05:05, kitepilot wrote: >> Michael Havens writes: >>> The data on my root partition only is about 8 gig. The partition in >>> total >>> is 48 gig. Can anyone say wasted space? >> Can anybody ask: Why does Michael need a 'boot' partition to begin with? > > If you're going to have more than 1 distro on a machine, having a boot > partition is a good idea as it simplifies bootloader configuration. > >> (my opinion follows, we all know the global opinion about opinions) > > Yes, these are my opinions and most of them can't really be objectively > proven or tested. > >> Other partitions for specific directories (/tmp /var/log) are mostly >> predicated on guarding the machine against inadvertent 'filesystem >> fill up' > > This is true. Having / or /var fill up tends to cause problems even on a > single-user workstation though. > >> Point is: why does Michael (or someone like 'Michael') need several >> specific directories isolated on specific partitions? >> Answer? He doesn't... YMMV. > > Having one partition is the simplest thing to do, and means you don't have > to worry about making /usr or /var large enough.[0] I do this if there's > only 1 disk and only 1 distro on the machine. > > On my desktop, there's 1 SSD and 2 spinny-disks in softRAID-1. SSD has 4 > partitions: EFI boot, /boot, / , and an empty partition where / will go > in case I want to try something other than Gentoo. Spinny-disks have 3 > partitions: backup / in case the SSD fails[1], swap, and an LVM > partition. LVM partition contains LVs for /var , /home , and /usr/portage > , and there's still about 400G for those LVs to become larger or to create > new LVs. (LVM is more flexible than partitions, and allows you to get > around the 15-partition limit, but only Linux can handle it.) > > [0] Having /usr be separate from / is more difficult than it used to be, > though. > [1] Hey, it could happen! > > -- > Crow202 Blog: http://crow202.org/wordpress > There is no Darkness in Eternity > But only Light too dim for us to see. > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss