On Fri, 29.05.2009 at 11:19:44 +0300, Dan Naumov wrote: > Also, free free to criticize my planned filesystem layout for the > first disk of this system, the idea behind /mnt/sysbackup is to take a > snapshot of the FreeBSD installation and it's settings before doing > potentially hazardous things like upgrading to a new -RELEASE: > > ad1s1 (freebsd system slice) > ad1s1a => 128bit Blowfish ad1s1a.eli 4GB swap > ad1s1b 128GB ufs2+s / > ad1s1c 128GB ufs2+s noauto /mnt/sysbackup > > ad1s2 => 128bit Blowfish ad1s2.eli > zpool > /home > /mnt/data1
Hi Dan, everybody has different needs, but what exactly are you doing with 128GB of / ? What I did is the following: 2GB CF card + CF to ATA adapter (today, I would use 2x8GB USB sticks, CF2ATA adapters suck, but then again, which Mobo has internal USB ports?) Filesystem 1024-blocks Used Avail Capacity Mounted on /dev/ad0a 507630 139740 327280 30% / /dev/ad0d 1453102 1292296 44558 97% /usr /dev/md0 253678 16 233368 0% /tmp /usr is quite crowded, but I just need to clean up some ports again. /var, /usr/src, /home, /usr/obj, /usr/ports are all on the GELI+ZFS pool. If /usr turns out to be to small, I can also move /usr/local there. That way booting and single user involves trusty old UFS only. I also do regular dumps from the UFS filesystems to the ZFS tank, but there's really no sacred data under / or /usr that I would miss if the system crashed (all configuration changes are tracked using mercurial). Anyway, my point is to use the full disks for GELI+ZFS whenever possible. This makes it more easy to replace faulty disks or grow ZFS pools. The FreeBSD base system, I would put somewhere else. Cheers, Ulrich Spörlein -- http://www.dubistterrorist.de/ _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscr...@freebsd.org"