Difference between revisions of "Partitions setup"
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Revision as of 20:22, 24 May 2014
How to setup the partitions are a key point in Linux installation process.
There are many school regarding that:
- More partitions will bring more control and avoid memory leaks to spread out
- Less partitions are easier to manage
In all cases
In all cases, you need at least 2 partitions:
- 1 data partition called root (/)
- 1 temporary partition called "swap". This is the temporary data of the system.
The swap size depends on your RAM:
- Up to 4 Go RAM: double your RAM value
- 8 to 16 Go RAM: put the same amount as your RAM
- more than 16 Go RAM: that's hard to evaluate. 16 Go of swap is already a lot! That should be enough in all cases.
Desktop installation
For a desktop installation you can use the default partitionning table. This is generally good enough.
Some developers - like me - are used to put "/opt" in a dedicated space.
This is my partition table:
File System | Mount point | Size | Type | Flags |
---|---|---|---|---|
fat32 | /boot | 150 Mo | primary | boot |
ext4 | / | 50 Go | primary | boot |
swap | 8 Go | primary | ||
ext4 | /home | 400 Go | logical |
Server installation
Unlike a workstation, it's quite important to setup some partitions on a server. This will avoid to have to many logs or temp files - for instance. Then you'll have to monitor regulary the matching mount points to check the available space.
This is how I setup my servers:
File System | Mount point | Size | Type |
---|---|---|---|
ext4 | / | 50 Go | primary |
swap | 8 Go | primary | |
ext4 | /home | 424 Go | primary |
ext4 | /var/log | 2 Go | logical |
ext4 | /tmp | 4 Go | logical |