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Re: [linux-lvm] Mandrake 8.1 and LVM
- From: Wolfgang Weisselberg <weissel netcologne de>
- To: linux-lvm sistina com
- Subject: Re: [linux-lvm] Mandrake 8.1 and LVM
- Date: Sat Dec 1 10:30:02 2001
Hi, Theo!
Theo Van Dinter (felicity kluge net) wrote 60 lines:
> My rule of thumb for disk layout on a server is:
> /boot - Small, usually 32-128MB, don't run out of space here.
You can also do a combined / and /boot. Give it enough space
and move everything where non-related changes happen away
from it. (128 to 256 MB should outlast your HD.) Non-LVM.
> / - I put /usr in here since there's no reason not to any
Personally I feel /usr really wants a separate partition.
You also may want partitions for /usr/src (if you have lots of
compiling/source code for the whole machine), and /usr/local
(if you use more than a few programs which are not on your
distribution). Sub-partitions are possible, depending on usage.
Long live LVM.
> /var - As someone's already stated, filling up /var can be a DoS.
If you have a news spool, put it on a separate partition --
it's just too different from size and lifetime compared to
/var. Unless you have a non-file/hardlink-based news system.
And then still move it out of the way.
If you have a WWW cache, that one might want a separate
partition as well -- and usually there's no need to backup
that cache.
> /tmp - Yet another possible DoS, don't allow user-writable areas
> to live on /. 128-512M should be sufficient, it's
> temporary space after all.
More -- especially with quotas. Sometimes people have to
download CD-Rom Images (e.g. .iso) and might be unable to put
them into /home.
Speaking of it -- /home probably wants a partition, too; and
regular backups.
-Wolfgang
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