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Jay4hand 06-11-2002 01:33 PM

partitioning
 
Would love some advice on partitioning with disk druid.

I have two 2.5 gig drives I would like dedicated to Red Hat 7.0, or 7.3 when I let 7.0 auto config my partitions, I get a swap on hda, and the rest of the o/s resides on hdb.

what I would like is for the distribution cd to install completely on hda, and use hdb for my downloads, games and music files.

What partitions and sizes should I set, what mount labels should I use?

I am very new, and any other related advice would be VERY appreciated

acid_kewpie 06-11-2002 01:47 PM

/boot 25mb
/ 1.1gb
/usr 1.2gb
swap 150mb

something like that will do fine....

Ryan_Sutton 06-11-2002 01:47 PM

Jay, swap space is the same as Virtual memory, if you are lacking in RAM or have a really old system you may need a bit more swap space than norm. When you setup your paritions, set your mount point to hdb, that should install RH on your second HD, if you have 7.3 use it and install KDE3, you will like it

Ryan_Sutton 06-11-2002 01:48 PM

Too slow again!

Jay4hand 06-11-2002 02:32 PM

thanks for the fast replies, why should I install on hdb instead of hda? also, Ive been using GNOME, what could I expect from KDE3? The documentation I'm using is REDHAT for Dummies, which has been VERY helpful, but doesnt go into any real depth about partitions. what are some common mount points, and what are their uses?

acid_kewpie 06-11-2002 02:46 PM

there's no reason to install on hdb... can't see why they mentioned that. also... kde3 sucks... you know it, i know it. it's for people who can't get out of that windows mindset. stick to gnome, or better still, blackbox or something else equally superfast and lightweight.

you really don't want many partitions, you've too little space to divide. you really don't *need* anything except a single / and some swap (no more than 100mb really is ever needed) but a seperate /home and /usr are pretty handy for security and flexibilty, but like i said, you probably can't afford to commit yourself to a certain size of /usr (were 95% of programs live) or such like.

Ryan_Sutton 06-11-2002 03:06 PM

my bad, didn't mean to install on hdb, typo, you might like KDE3 in that it has the smooth interface of Windows and the reliability of a Linux kernel, MOST new users preffeer this interface to learn X.

jglen490 06-11-2002 03:54 PM

Quote:

kde3 sucks... you know it
Gee, I'm sorry you don't like KDE, but that doesn't mean that the rest of us have to NOT like it, too. That's just too Bill Gates of you :D !!

Name calling aside :D, the question is, what is a good partitioning scheme for Jay's two hard drives.

Acid_kewpie's recommendation:
/boot 25mb
/ 1.1gb
/usr 1.2gb
swap 150mb
is actually pretty good for hda. Then simply set /home to be hdb, assuming that you plan on having a pile of downloads and personal data.

Jay4hand 06-11-2002 04:32 PM

thankyou, Ill give that a try and let you know how I feel about those partition setups.

Noerr 06-11-2002 04:57 PM

why do people think that kde is a windoze clone. It's nicer, more inovative, more powerful, and older than windoze. Now tell me why is it pro-win

btw sorry about the subject change


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