Thanks again. Boy, I'm looking forward to the day I can answer more
questions than I ask...

John


civileme wrote:
> 
> On Friday 05 January 2001 19:09, you wrote:
> > Thanks c,
> >
> > I'll do that (one small newbie step at a time)...
> > when backing up /home, can I simply cp to another drive then cp back, or
> > will this mess up links and such?
> >
> > merci
> >
> > John
> 
> Just use cp -a in both directions and everything will be preserved.
> 
> Civileme
> 
> >
> > civileme wrote:
> > > On Friday 05 January 2001 01:57, you wrote:
> > > > Hi folks, I'm confused. (Surprise).
> > > >
> > > > I'm new to 7.2 (and mandrake, generally), so I used the installation
> > > > guide when deciding on partition sizes. This is what I have:
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > /               492MB
> > > > /boot                 9.5MB
> > > > /home                 4.24GB
> > > > /usr          3.17GB
> > > > and then swap of 64MB (I think, same as RAM)
> > > >
> > > > The thing is, the guide suggested 300MB for /. I was greedy and used
> > > > 492MB, but now  kdf shows / as having only 99.9MB free (392 used?!).
> > > > Ten days ago, there was 110MB free - at this rate, I'll run out of
> > > > space on the partition.
> > > >
> > > > So was the 300MB a bad suggestion, or is something freaky?
> > > > If I have to expand /, what's the best way to do it and not lose data
> > > > (I have partition magic on a W95 partition)? and how big should I make
> > > > it?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks (again!)
> > > >
> > > > John
> > >
> > > The new Linux Standard base stuck htmldocs and ftp in /var.  I strongly
> > > recommend it as a separate partition (NOT a symlinked one, too many
> > > scripts/proggies that access it do a ../ and think they will be at /.)
> > >
> > > backup the data on /home, split it about 50/50 since most of your servers
> > > now live on /var.  make the two partitions, /home and /newvar mount
> > > points,
> > >
> > > cp -a /var /newvar
> > > rm -r /var -f
> > >
> > > EITHER
> > > umount /newvar
> > > in /etc/fstab, edit the mount point /newvar to /var then mount /var
> > > OR
> > > or if you get nervous editing your  filesystems table , just
> > >
> > > ln -s /newvar /var
> > >
> > > Civileme

Reply via email to