Hi, I have just build a machine, and am ready to start putting the "stable" on it. This is the first time I have built one from scratch, and it has made me think in detail about what I am doing as I put it all together. Now as I am newish to Linux I thought you might indulge me her. On two other boxes I have here I have "potato" running fine, but as I think about it there may be a better set-up. To help me get to the enlightened approach could I pick the panel brains on the following?
1: I recently read that logical partitions were better than primary because of the size limits on the directories. I didn't quit understand this. On this laptop I have 4 primary partitions, with the 4th holding 4 logical. Is this unwise? Should I just have one big logical partition? 2: In my other machines I have 128 Mb memory, so I have had a 128 Mb swap file. In my new machine I have taken advantage of the low price and put 512 Mb in it. This set me thinking, and I cannot reconcile the following I have been told or read; a: "With 512 Mb ram you don't need a swap file" b: "You must have a swap file 2x ram" c: "Over 128 Mb ram you must have a swap file of there same size" d: "A swap file cannot be over 128 Mb" e: "A swap file cannot be over 256 Mb" f: "A swap file cannot be over 512 Mb" g: "Swap files must be in multiple of 128 Mb" h: "Swap files are an irrelevance on modern machines" My questions are not from a lack of research, rather I have found out too much which is contradictory. I would like some guidance in sorting the what from the chaff here Keith -- +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Keith O'Connell | "That which does not kill | | Maidstone, Kent (UK) | us, usually still hurts. | | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | That's just life, I'm afraid" | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+