Types of partitions
TheCactusKid Cactus
thecactuskid45 at yahoo.com
Wed Mar 10 11:13:47 EST 2004
Wow.....Thanks for the info! Now I think I understand it all a lot better.
I see, I've got a bit of planning to do before I just jump in and start installing.
Thanks, tHecActUsKid:)
Darin Perusich <Darin.Perusich at cognigencorp.com> wrote:
filesystem layout are really personal perference more then anything
else. the main reason for breaking up filesystems across multiple mount
point are if one filesystem fills up it will not effect the other
filesystems and for backups. /, /boot, /usr, /var are usually the
filesystem used by the OS itself, /home is user space, /usr/local and
/opt for 3rd party apps.
TheCactusKid Cactus wrote:
> *Hi y'all,*
> *I've got a question. Now I read that there's a /boot, /root, /swap,
> /user/local & or /user, (don't really understand the difference?) and
> /home. Are there any others I should know about in a typical
> installation or is this it? What would be the difference between.... in
> the line-up that is....from a Workstation and Server class install. (as
> far as types of partitions) What would be the line-up of either? I know
> I'm not setting up a server class system but for the heck of it what
> would be the line-up? Thanks for all the help.*
> **
> *tHecActUsKid:)*
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Do you Yahoo!?
> Yahoo! Search - Find what youre looking for faster.
>
--
Darin Perusich
Unix Systems Administrator
Cognigen Corp.
darinper at cognigencorp.com
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Search - Find what youre looking for faster.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.nflug.org/pipermail/nflug/attachments/20040310/d1aefc93/attachment-0001.html
More information about the nflug
mailing list