Also, a lot of people don't really need a 100mb boot partition, even if
you have a separate boot partition. I often have 3 or 4 kernel images with
corresponding System.map and config, and I haven't ever needed more than a
15-20mb space for them. It really depends on what you are planning to do.
-
Thus spake [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
# What's a "typical" partition table look like for a Debian box?
#
# I thought that the minimum would be:
#
# /boot around 100-200 mb
# swaparound 1-2x RAM (in this case, 2 gig)
# / everything else...
This is typical, but not the minimum requirement. All
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What's a "typical" partition table look like for a Debian box?
I thought that the minimum would be:
/boot around 100-200 mb
swaparound 1-2x RAM (in this case, 2 gig)
/everything else...
Notice no /boot partition at all so where would Grub and the
kernel be?
I'm having installation issues on a new box, and i'm second-guessing
myself a little bit, so here goes:
What's a "typical" partition table look like for a Debian box?
I thought that the minimum would be:
/boot around 100-200 mb
swaparound 1-2x RAM (in this case, 2 gig)
/ everything el
4 matches
Mail list logo