Date: Sun, 28 Aug 2005 23:23:09 -0700 From: Colin Percival <cperciva@freebsd.org> To: "C. Michailidis" <dinom@balstonresearch.com> Cc: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Sysinstall automatic filesystem size generation. Message-ID: <4312A9CD.8040008@freebsd.org> In-Reply-To: <200508290213.12978.dinom@balstonresearch.com> References: <200508282330.09302.dinom@balstonresearch.com> <20050829033739.GV26920@bunrab.catwhisker.org> <200508290213.12978.dinom@balstonresearch.com>
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C. Michailidis wrote: > Remember, I'm talking about the 'path of least resistance', I understand that > I could label the slice manually with any number of different configurations. > The issue I was hoping to shed some light on is... "Can the auto-configuration > mechanism stand to be improved?". Is it reasonable (in today's era of dirt cheap > disk space) to have a mere 256MB allocated to /tmp (or /var or even /) by > default? The default sizes are now currently 512 MB for / and /tmp, and 1024 MB plus space for one crashdump on /var. If anything, these are vast overkill for most systems; on /, for example, it is hard to imagine a situation where a normal user would use more than 150MB of space unless they were doing something which they shouldn't be doing. Colin Percival
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