Hi. In older days a /usr/local was recommended because this is where you would install all the "alien" software on your system. By alien I mean, Things that did not come prepared for your system, or things you compiled yourself.
Ourdays it is quite rare (at least from what I see), to find 'things that end up in /usr/local', so why put it in a different partition?. Dont!. The best use of putting the /usr/local on another partition is that you can delete your root partition install a new distrbution without having to install all those extra packages you put in /usr/local. Personally I find it quite usefull. Netscape 6, wxwindows libs, fox libs,... by default install in /usr/local With /usr its probably another story. What happens if you over install software (mostly oing in /usr), or logs overgrow too much, mail starts bulking,.... Your ONLY / partition has no space to work with... could be a problem. This is avoided if you put / on one partition, /usr on another, /var on a third. The /usr/local and /home for portability (between distributions) and security may go on other partitions. It would probably be very desirable if important partitions where on different hard disks, thus not sharing the load and heating of a stressed system! This all depends on whether you are going to have a lot of load on your system or if it is going to highly stressed. For a home user all this may be unnecesary !. Of course I may be wrong... Bye, Mark. ----- Original Message ----- From: Lazar Fleysher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <debian-user@lists.debian.org> Sent: Friday, December 01, 2000 1:11 PM Subject: Partitioning disk > > Hi Everybody, > > This question has been a topic of many discussions but I still do not > understand the reason why people suggest to have separate partitions of > /usr > /usr/local/ > > In early days when disks were small, this was the only choise, but now, > why do not just have a 1 - 2G partition for the system and other > partitions for other things as needed? > > Thank you > > Lazar > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com