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Thread: Best partitioning scheme?




Best partitioning scheme?
user name
2006-05-23 22:45:41
Luciano ES <luc-netbsdbraziliantranslation.net> wrote:
> Hi. I am want to have a NetBSD-based desktop box and
intend to use the 
> following partitioning scheme in a 20 Gb disk:
> 
> label	mount	Mb
> a	/  	500
> b	swap	1,000
> e	/tmp	1,200
> f	/var	600
> g	/usr	10,000
> h	/home	7,000
> 
> I have considerable experience with Linux, but almost
zero experience with 
> BSDs. I have Slackware using almost 6 Gb, and since I
intend to install 
> NetBSD plus all the Linux compatibility stuff and a
handful of Linux 
> programs, I figured I'd need at least 10 Gb in /usr.
But it is just an 
> estimate. I am not sure at all.
> 
> What do you think of this scheme? Am I giving too much
more or less space than 
> I should to any partition? All comments are more than
welcome.

 This is my main imap, smtp, and web server.  It has X11R6
and compiled
 pkgs installed in /usr.

Filesystem  1K-blocks      Used     Avail Capacity  Mounted
on
/dev/sd0a      123646     45677     71787    38%    /
/dev/sd0f      985843    275920    660631    29%    /var
/dev/sd0g     1016452    785641    179989    81%    /usr
/dev/sd0h     6365303   3657263   2389775    60%    /local
mfs:115         63471        28     60270     0%    /tmp

 NetBSD is quite a bit leaner than the Linux distributions
i've seen.

 /usr/X11R6 is about 150 MB

 I have about 350 MB of packages installed (/usr/pkg), but
this isn't a
 desktop, so you may want to plan on more like 1 GB of
packages, for
 things like Mozilla or Firefox.

 My NetBSD & pkgsrc sources are on a NFS mounted file
system -- they can
 be quite large.  My NetBSD-3 src tree, complete with
compiled versions of
 NetBSD for three architectures and all the compiled object
files uses
 about 5 GB . My pkgsrc area uses about 600 MB.

The Build area for pkgsrc (which you can define to be
anywhere) needs to
 be multiple GB for large things like Mozilla.

 I think you /usr is probably on the large side, but it just
depends on
 where you end up putting NetBSD and pkgsrc sources, if you
plan to
 install them.

 Hope that helps.

 -johan



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