Best Filesystems?

William Park opengeometry-FFYn/CNdgSA at public.gmane.org
Thu Aug 11 20:32:37 UTC 2005


On Thu, Aug 11, 2005 at 03:52:28PM -0400, Colin McGregor wrote:
> Under normal conditions I would have to disagree with
> this VERY strongly, and for an example as two why I
> can go back to earlier this week. FreeBSD box in my
> office acting as mail server. Elsewhere in the
> building umpteen Windows boxes, one of which became
> virus infected on Tuesday. Windows box starts spewing
> 10^n th copies of itself.
> 
> Ok, so /var on the FreeBSD box gets filled, and the
> mail server part of the box falls down (a pain I
> "shared" with a Windows user <evil grin>), but the
> other functions on the box remained up, web pages were
> served off the box, name service continued, and most
> importantly I could still log in and see where the
> problems were. All this because /tmp and the other
> directories other than /var were writeable. 
> 
> Now, there are only two situations where I would even
> consider 1/2 partions. For the Linux World Canada show
> I did everything into 1 partition, this was a Linux
> install that was supposed to last less than 48 hours,
> and Knoppix gave me the option of doing a quick/dirty
> 1 partition install (not ideal, but for 48 hours, I
> could tolerate it). The other situation came up a few
> years ago when I attempted to install a conventional
> Linux on to an LS-120 floppy (a special 120 MB floppy
> disk). When you only have 120 MB to play with you are
> SO tight for space, you have to make some less than
> ideal compromises...
> 
> For "normal" installs I want the safety of the extra
> partions.

There is one answer for 500MB harddisks, and another answer for 500GB
harddisks.  I'm well aware of /var, /tmp, and mount option arguments.
But, not formatting wrong partition is also good argument.

-- 
William Park <opengeometry-FFYn/CNdgSA at public.gmane.org>, Toronto, Canada
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