Subject: Re: Rototil of sysinst partitioning code
To: Wojciech Puchar <wojtek@tensor.3miasto.net>
From: John Franklin <franklin@elfie.org>
List: current-users
Date: 06/05/2003 14:58:57
On Thursday, Jun 5, 2003, at 14:34 US/Eastern, Wojciech Puchar wrote:
>> I'm with Graywolf here, on the pro-split-em side. My reasoning is
>> similar to his: /usr doesn't get modified often, usually only when=20=
>> new
>> software is installed. /var gets modified all the time. It hold the
>> databases (locate, pkg, mysql), the log files, the mail spool (both =
in
>> and out), printer spools... it's one busy little partition.
>>
>> If there is file system corruption, either from a bug or a power=20
>> glitch
>> or whatever, I'd rather only lose the data on /var -- suck though it
>
> in case of one partition you will lose only unwritten data too so no
> problems with /usr.
You're right. I was considering a case of more catastrophic failure.
This just occurred to me: The other reason to do it with multiple=20
partitions is that many "new users" are using free OS like NetBSD to=20
learn how *NIX works. Doing it in a similar, albeit scaled down,=20
version of a data center machine makes the OS a more valuable learning=20=
tool.
jf
--=20
John Franklin
franklin@elfie.org
ICBM: 35=B043'56"N 78=B053'27"W