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#26 2008-05-30 21:03:09

Phrodo_00
Member
From: Seattle, WA
Registered: 2006-04-09
Posts: 342
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

/media/windows - ntfs 15gb
/media/media - ntfs 120gb
/boot - ext3 128mb
/ reiserfs 12gb
swap - swap 2gb (yay hibernation)

Mi laptop is pretty much the same, only /media/media is only 80gb

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#27 2008-05-30 23:17:03

kezar
Member
Registered: 2007-08-14
Posts: 61

Re: What is your partition scheme?

/dev/sda1               swap
/dev/sda2               /
/dev/sda3               /home
/dev/sda5               /tmp
/dev/sda6               /backup
/dev/sda7               /development
/dev/sda8               /emul
/dev/sda9               /images
/dev/sda10             /net
/dev/sda11             /music
/dev/sda12             /video

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#28 2008-05-31 03:58:47

violagirl23
Member
Registered: 2008-01-24
Posts: 184

Re: What is your partition scheme?

O_O I wonder if I should feel guilty by the simplicty of my setup.
sda1 some vista boot thing i dunno
sda2 vista - ntfs
sda3 arch - ext3
sda5 swap - swap
That's about it.
XD
I just stuck with what I knew.


"You can't just ask to borrow somebody else's lampshade. It's AWKWARD!"

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#29 2008-05-31 04:07:44

Stythys
Member
From: SF Bay Area
Registered: 2008-05-18
Posts: 878
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

I just have a separate /boot and /home. the rest is standard


[home page] -- [code / configs]

"Once you go Arch, you must remain there for life or else Allan will track you down and break you."
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#30 2008-05-31 04:42:50

shazeal
Member
From: New Zealand
Registered: 2007-06-05
Posts: 341

Re: What is your partition scheme?

Using raid1 for system 160g drives
md0 (xfs) = /boot
md1 (xfs) = /
md2 (xfs) = /home/x/downloads

250g drive for other stuff
sdc1 = swap
sdc2 (ext3) = full of junk/backups

Didnt feel the need to go crazy, when I get some new drives and do it again I will probably make seperate /opt and /var partitions to cut down on any fragmentation, but meh, not a big deal.

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#31 2008-05-31 04:57:17

Gullible Jones
Member
Registered: 2004-12-29
Posts: 4,863

Re: What is your partition scheme?

/dev/sda1 - root, 7 GB, ext3
/dev/sda2 - swap, 1 GB
/dev/sda3 - /var, 2 GB, ext3
/dev/sda4 - /home, 70 GB, ext3

It works... I just have no idea what to do with 70 GB of free space.

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#32 2008-05-31 05:21:50

Allan
Pacman
From: Brisbane, AU
Registered: 2007-06-09
Posts: 11,405
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

I use the same partitioning scheme on all my computers.  Simple, but does the job.

/dev/sda1 - /boot, 128M, ext2
/dev/sda2 - /, 10Gb, ext3
/dev/sda3 - swap, 4Gb
/dev/sda4 - /home, the rest (~100Gb on laptop, no idea on desktop...), ext3

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#33 2008-05-31 11:15:05

ido
Member
Registered: 2007-09-15
Posts: 28

Re: What is your partition scheme?

I've been paging through this thread and I see that some have a /boot partition, but others don't. Out of interest and perhaps self-improvement I would like to know why you have it or for what cause.

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#34 2008-05-31 11:21:00

dyscoria
Member
Registered: 2008-01-10
Posts: 1,007

Re: What is your partition scheme?

ido wrote:

I've been paging through this thread and I see that some have a /boot partition, but others don't. Out of interest and perhaps self-improvement I would like to know why you have it or for what cause.

It used to be very recommended IIRC but not really required anymore, but it can be a security benefit. It'll be mounted on boot, then unmounted after its finished (once you reach your login manager) so that there is less chance of data corruption. It can't get filled up if your filesystem gets filled up.
It's generally done on an ext2 filesystem as it's the fastest to mount and you don't really need journalling on such a small partition that is mounted only at boot.


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knock-once 1.2: BASH script to easily create/send one-time sequences for knockd (forum/AUR)

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#35 2008-05-31 11:31:23

Allan
Pacman
From: Brisbane, AU
Registered: 2007-06-09
Posts: 11,405
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

dyscoria wrote:

It'll be mounted on boot, then unmounted after its finished (once you reach your login manager)

Really?  I hadn't heard of people unmounting boot before.

I find it a lot easier to set up dual boot systems with a /boot partition.  Well, at least it was historically.  Haven't tried setting one up without a boot partition in quite a while.

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#36 2008-05-31 11:37:57

bangkok_manouel
Member
From: indicates a starting point
Registered: 2005-02-07
Posts: 1,556

Re: What is your partition scheme?

Filesystem          1K-blocks
/dev/sda1           93307           /boot         ext2
/dev/sda5           4152636       /var           reiserFS
/dev/sda6           7692876       /                ext3
/dev/sda7           86511612      /home       ext3

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#37 2008-05-31 11:41:39

dyscoria
Member
Registered: 2008-01-10
Posts: 1,007

Re: What is your partition scheme?

Allan wrote:
dyscoria wrote:

It'll be mounted on boot, then unmounted after its finished (once you reach your login manager)

Really?  I hadn't heard of people unmounting boot before.

I find it a lot easier to set up dual boot systems with a /boot partition.  Well, at least it was historically.  Haven't tried setting one up without a boot partition in quite a while.

I think back when I had a separate boot, I had the readonly and 'noauto' option in fstab. That made sure it was used only at boot time, though i had to remember to mount it manually before upgrading the kernel. I've since got tired of such a task big_smile

Last edited by dyscoria (2008-05-31 12:52:53)


flack 2.0.6: menu-driven BASH script to easily tag FLAC files (AUR)
knock-once 1.2: BASH script to easily create/send one-time sequences for knockd (forum/AUR)

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#38 2008-06-02 04:42:40

fukawi2
Ex-Administratorino
From: .vic.au
Registered: 2007-09-28
Posts: 6,224
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

ido wrote:

I've been paging through this thread and I see that some have a /boot partition, but others don't. Out of interest and perhaps self-improvement I would like to know why you have it or for what cause.

As others said, I do it out of habit on my servers:
1) If / gets filled for whatever reason, I can still boot the system (or at least, stand more chance of booting it). Same reason I mount /var and /tmp to their own partitions so they can't stuff up / if they get filled up.
2) I can mount it read-only for security.
3) If / gets damaged and/or corrupted, /boot won't be affected.
4) It lets me use a tried and tested FS like ext2/3 which letting me use XFS / JFS / ReiserFS on the rest of the system.

Although I've never unmounted it after boot. I can see the argument for it though.

Last edited by fukawi2 (2008-06-02 04:43:17)

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#39 2008-06-04 04:41:18

Phrodo_00
Member
From: Seattle, WA
Registered: 2006-04-09
Posts: 342
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

ido wrote:

I've been paging through this thread and I see that some have a /boot partition, but others don't. Out of interest and perhaps self-improvement I would like to know why you have it or for what cause.

for me it's that reiserfs crawls when it hasn't been umounted properly, wich is what happens during hibernation, so without /boot being ext2/3 grub takes around 30secs to load stage1.5, and something arounf that fro loading the kernel.

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#40 2008-06-04 06:21:32

hussam
Member
Registered: 2006-03-26
Posts: 572
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

From output of mount:
/dev/mapper/root on / type ext3
/dev/sda1 on /boot type ext3
/dev/mapper/home on /home type ext3
binfmt_misc on /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc type binfmt_misc

+ the gvfs fuse mount.

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#41 2008-06-04 09:31:07

hrist
Member
From: Germany
Registered: 2007-01-07
Posts: 61
Website

Re: What is your partition scheme?

Partition table:

Name | Flags | Part Type | FS Type    | Size (MB)
sda1 |  Boot |  Primary  | Linux ext2 | 197.41
sda5 |   NC  |  Logical  | Linux LVM  | 109906.20
sda6 |       |  Logical  | Linux LVM  | 50001.48
sda7 |       |  Logical  | Linux LVM  | 89951.67

Logical volumes

LV       VG   Attr   LSize  Origin Snap%  Move Log Copy%  Convert
home     lvm  -wi-ao 50.00G                                      
root     lvm  -wi-ao 20.00G                                      
stargate lvm  -wi-ao 50.00G                                      
var      lvm  -wi-ao  5.00G

I have 3 partitions in one LVM because sda6 was a /home from a installation before and I wanted to keep it, so I created a lvm with sda5 and sda7 and then copied /home into the lvm and added sda6 to the lvm :-)

D'oh forgot the how I use the lvm :-)

Filesystem            Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/mapper/root       20G  3.0G   18G  15% /
none                  1.6G     0  1.6G   0% /dev/shm
/dev/mapper/home       50G   31G   20G  61% /home
/dev/mapper/var       5.0G  459M  4.6G   9% /var
/dev/mapper/lvm-stargate
                       50G   26G   25G  51% /home/hrist/stargate
/dev/sda1             183M   13M  161M   8% /boot

/var is xfs, /boot ext2 the rest is jfs

Last edited by hrist (2008-06-04 11:22:51)


two - Arch64 | dwm | nvidia
three - Arch64 | dwm | nvidia

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#42 2008-06-04 11:09:46

phildg
Member
Registered: 2006-03-10
Posts: 146

Re: What is your partition scheme?

Keep my partitions as simple as possible, things are complicated enough without deliberately making things more complicated.

Standard Desktop

/dev/sda2 on / type ext3 (rw)
none on /dev type ramfs (rw)
none on /proc type proc (rw)
none on /sys type sysfs (rw)
none on /dev/pts type devpts (rw)
none on /proc/bus/usb type usbfs (rw,devgid=101,devmode=0664)
newcastle:/home on /home type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)
newcastle:/disk1 on /disk1 type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)
newcastle:/disk2 on /disk2 type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)
newcastle:/disk3 on /mm/1 type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)
newcastle:/disk4 on /mm/2 type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)
newcastle:/disk5 on /mm/3 type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)
newcastle:/snapshots on /snapshots type nfs (rw,addr=192.168.10.2)

Server

/dev/mirror/gm0s1a on / (ufs, local)
devfs on /dev (devfs, local)
/dev/mirror/gm0s1d on /tmp (ufs, local, noexec, nosuid, soft-updates, acls)
/dev/mirror/gm0s1e on /var (ufs, local, noatime, soft-updates)
/dev/mirror/gm0s1f on /usr (ufs, local, noatime, soft-updates)
/dev/mirror/gm0s1g on /home (ufs, NFS exported, local, noatime, nosuid, with quotas, soft-updates, acls)
/dev/ad8s1d on /disk1 (ufs, NFS exported, local, noatime, noexec, nosuid, soft-updates, acls)
/dev/ad0s1d on /disk2 (ufs, NFS exported, local, noatime, noexec, nosuid, soft-updates, acls)
/dev/ad10s1d on /disk3 (ufs, NFS exported, local, noatime, noexec, nosuid, soft-updates, acls)
/dev/ad12s1d on /disk4 (ufs, NFS exported, local, noatime, noexec, nosuid, soft-updates, acls)
/dev/ad14s1d on /disk5 (ufs, NFS exported, local, noatime, noexec, nosuid, soft-updates, acls)
/disk1/backup/snapshots on /snapshots (nullfs, NFS exported, local, noatime, noexec, nosuid, read-only, acls)
devfs on /var/named/dev (devfs, local)
/dev/md0a on /usr/jail/www (ufs, local)
devfs on /usr/jail/www/dev (devfs, local)
/home/www on /usr/jail/www/home (nullfs, local)

The laptop (/ is encrypted, that's the reason for the separate /boot partition

/dev/mapper/root on / type ext3 (rw)
none on /dev type ramfs (rw)
none on /proc type proc (rw)
none on /sys type sysfs (rw)
/dev/sda1 on /boot type ext2 (rw)
none on /dev/pts type devpts (rw)
none on /proc/bus/usb type usbfs (rw,devgid=101,devmode=0664)

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