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Date:      Thu, 7 Oct 1999 15:21:32 -0700
From:      "David O'Brien" <obrien@FreeBSD.ORG>
To:        Brad Knowles <blk@skynet.be>
Cc:        freebsd-current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: make install trick
Message-ID:  <19991007152132.F68920@dragon.nuxi.com>
In-Reply-To: <v04205500b420d230e6ff@[195.238.21.204]>
References:  <Pine.BSF.4.05.9910051831180.6368-100000@fw.wintelcom.net> <v04205500b420d230e6ff@[195.238.21.204]>

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> 	It was my understanding that it was standard recommended practice 
> practice pretty much across the board to create the following 
> separate filesystems:
> 
> 		/
> 		/tmp (perhaps an mfs, perhaps softupdates, or whatever)
> 		/usr
> 		/var
> 		/var/tmp
> 		/home (or wherever you're going to store user directories)
> 	And that most people also then created a separate filesystem for 
> /usr/local or /opt, or wherever they're going to store the additional 

You are entering religion.  I despise, HIGHLY DESPISE, all the
partitions.  I don't care for the fragmentation and PITA when upgrading
it leads to.  HP and SGI workstations have a single huge /.  Why do you
need /usr seperate from / when you aren't diskless (or /usr'less)?  Look
at the historic reasons for this division and see if it still makes sense
to you today.  (and before someone misreads this, yes, my /home is a
seperate partition and my /tmp is MFS)

-- 
-- David    (obrien@NUXI.com)


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