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Re: [TCLUG:16545] Partition sizes?



Just a note.  I have a 13GB HDD with two partitions:

1) hda1: 12 GB (root)
2) hda2:   1 GB (swap)

and

3) hdb1  10 GB (FAT)

I don't remember what the exact values are, but I do KNOW that my root partion
is greater that the first 1023 cylinders.  Never had a problem.  Maybe it's the
version of lilo I run?

Eric


On Sat, 22 Apr 2000, Carl Wilhelm Soderstrom wrote:
> >As I understand it, and I could be wrong about this, the only thing that
> >matters is that the / partition begins somewhere below the 1024th
> >cylinder.
> 
>         my understanding is that LILO can't read above the 1023rd cylinder,
> so the kernel (and other boot files?) *must* be *entirely* below cylinder
> 1024. so if you have a dual-boot system with the drive in LBA mode (which
> reduces the # of cylinders), you may be able to get away with a bit more...
> provided LBA mode doesn't fsck up your partitioning (my advice is don't try
> any complicated partitioning schemes on an LBA-mode drive).
> 
> as for partitioning itself; I think the only thing that can teach you how to
> do it right, is experience. :)
>         personally, I use partitioning schemes that are probably more
> complicated than they really should be... but I've been building servers,
> and not workstations. :)
> 
> I personally put /usr on it's own partition; the theory being that one can
> mount it read-only, to lessen the chance of corruption, and impede crackers.
> (the truly paranoid would find a separate HDD that can be physically
> jumpered to be read-only; or else use a fast CD drive and burn the /usr tree
> to that).
>         considering that I've never actually done this, for various reasons,
> the utility of this idea may be questionable. :) it's a very nice theory,
> tho. :)
> 
> I also make /home a separate tree, for the reasons mentioned in other posts.
> however, if you have a good backup mechanism, that's probably a better idea
> than inconveniencing yourself with a separate partition.
> 
> /var (and /tmp) are often separate partitions on servers, for the sake of
> keeping runaway logs and spools (as during a DoS attack) from filling up the
> rest of the filesystem.
> 
> things get progressively stranger from there, as we venture into more
> special-purpose machines (news servers, mail servers, web servers, ftp
> servers). :)
> 
> Carl Soderstrom
> System Administrator    307 Brighton Ave. 
> Minnesota DHIA	        Buffalo, MN	
> carls@agritech.com      (763) 682-1091
> 
> 
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--
From:  Eric F Crist
Nickname: MnSlinky

"Time is the fire in which we burn.  Carpe Diem"