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Date:      Sun, 16 Apr 2006 14:07:44 -0800
From:      Beech Rintoul <beech@mangohealth.org>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Cc:        Brendan Grossman <brendan@grossman.id.au>
Subject:   Re: /boot at beginning of drive
Message-ID:  <200604161408.04461.beech@mangohealth.org>
In-Reply-To: <20060416213041.EE14128454@porsche.brendan.id.au>
References:  <20060416213041.EE14128454@porsche.brendan.id.au>

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On Sunday 16 April 2006 13:30, Brendan Grossman wrote:
> > Having a separate /tmp slice is not a bad idea, combining /,
> > /usr, and /var is unless you're doing a very minimal install.
>
> I can separate /usr, but my goal is to combine /home and /var, or at least
> where mail and databases are stored, for reasons already mentioned.
>
> I suppose I could do this...
>
> /	5gb
> swap	4gb
> /tmp	1gb
> /usr	70gb
>
> Then /home -> /usr/home, /var -> /usr/var
>
> Or create a 60gb partition and call it /users
>
> Then /var/mail -> /users/mail, /var/dbdir -> /users/dbdir
>
> The drive is 80gb (effectively 74ish), and 60gb of it must be for users
> (using either /var or /home)
>
> I suppose it is a bit better.

If /home is symlinked to /usr/home, then use a MTA that will deliver mail=20
to /home/user/mail. Databases are stored in /var/db for security reasons, b=
ut=20
there's no reason you can't configure whatever db you're using to store=20
database files in /usr. The reason for having a separate /var partition is =
in=20
the event of a filesystem crash or you get hacked it's much easier to resto=
re=20
important files. The same holds true for /etc (which is part of /). Doing a=
=20
restore of /usr just to get the system going again could take quite a while=
=20
and trying to restore to non-standard locations is guaranteed to give you=20
some grief. While there is no "standard" filesystem layout on *nix systems,=
=20
the recommended layout is tried and true and will be much easier to=20
troubleshoot without having to translate help documents to your custom setu=
p.

Beech
=2D-=20

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