Hi Evgeny, Thanks for your advice.
My critical question is in case OS crashed how to recover the data. In Windows world I make a D partition for data and C for OS. In case of crash I just reinstall the OS. My data are still there. How about in Linux world ??? At 03:38 PM 7/24/2002 +0200, Evgeny Limarenko wrote: >/boot should be of small size like 32Mb. Swap can be big enough, >something like twice an amount of RAM. The rest is for /. Theoretically, the size of swap is double the capacity of RAM. If RAM exceeds 1G how to set the swap size. Thanks in advance. > > Hi, > > as said before there is NO perfect partiotion sheme for everybody. If you > > want to be on the save side make /boot about 50 mb, swap 256 mb, 512 mb or > > even higher (depends completely on YOUR ram and software setup) and rest > > /root. In general: if you want to have more partitions you have to read > docs > > to check which makes sense for YOU AND EXPERIMENT. It took me quite some > > installs to find out how much to allocate for partitions like /, /usr, > /var > > and so on. > > Generaly it is advisable to put as many partitions as possible for easier > > administration and better performance. > > There is a doc. It's called something like "how to secure and optimize a > > linux redhat server". You'll find it somewhere on www.linuxdoc.org or > search > > on google. It gives some pointers and facts regarding partitoning. ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by: Jabber - The world's fastest growing real-time communications platform! Don't just IM. Build it in! http://www.jabber.com/osdn/xim _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.openprojects.net