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Date:      Thu, 05 May 2005 16:43:36 +0100
From:      freebsd.org@donnacha.com
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Cc:        Harald Schmalzbauer <harry@schmalzbauer.de>
Subject:   Re: How should I divvy up my HDDs?  Suggestions Please.
Message-ID:  <427A3F28.4040106@donnacha.com>
In-Reply-To: <200505051653.00301@harrymail>
References:  <200505051256.j45Cu2rM009492@clunix.cl.msu.edu> <200505051653.00301@harrymail>

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Hi Harald, thanks.

GPT sounds great but the quick search I did turned up a lot of 
references to 64-bit chips i.e. FreeBSD.org said "The GPT partitioning 
scheme was introduced with the ia64 architecture as an MBR replacement".

Can GPT be also be used on 32-bit chips?  My server has a single P4 2.8 
533FSB.

Also, is it easy to implement and commonly know about?  I ask because I 
won't be the one doing the initial installation.

Thanks,

Donnacha


Harald Schmalzbauer wrote:
> Am Donnerstag, 5. Mai 2005 14:56 schrieb Jerry McAllister:
> 
>>>Hello, I'm new to FreeBSD and this list, my name is Donnacha, I'm an
>>>Irishman living in Edinburgh, Scotland.
>>>
>>>I have read The Complete FreeBSD's section on disk partioning but
>>>would very much appreciate some advice on how to divide up the 2 HDDs
>>>I'm getting on my new server.
>>>
>>>The server is located in a facility in the US and will be used as a
>>>Web and email server.  It has an 80GB HDD and a 200GB HDD, both IDE
>>>but I'm asking for them to be placed on seperate buses.
>>>
>>>I was thinking of using the 80GB as the primary and placing / on it,
>>>while putting /var, /usr and /home on the 200GB.
>>>
>>>I'll have 2GB of RAM, so, I was thinking about putting 2GB of swap on
>>>each HDD.
>>>
>>>How does that sound.  I would be very grateful for any advice you can
>>>give me before I relay my instructions to the guys doing the
>>>installation.
>>
>>It depends a lot on what you leave in /usr and /var and /home.
>>It kind of looks like you will leave the 80GB drive mostly empty
>>the way you are doing things.  If all your accounts and web pages
>>are really in /home and you have no databases, I would be inclined
>>to put both /usr and /var in the 80GB drive and leave the other one
>>for home directories and web pages.   Since the default place for
>>databases is in /var that can make a big difference on where you put
>>it or if you take the db directory out of /var and put it somewhere
>>else, etc.
>>
>>Putting some of your swap on each drive as you have indicated
>>is a good idea.
>>
> 
> 
> Ack! I just wanted to point you to GPT. I always use my second drive 
> without MBR/slices/labels, just GPT. You can create up to 128 Pratitions 
> and together with either growfs ( if you leave unassigned space between 
> the partitions) or gconcat I have a very flexible storage solution (of 
> course gvinum is another option).
> It's also possible to create a GPT inside a slice (so even on the first 
> HD), just / must be on a bsdlabel.
> I use such a configuration for jails or virtual hosts, where every jail or 
> virthos has its own mountpoint. Initially with not too much space (1G), 
> increased on demand.
> 
> -Harry
> 
> 
>>////jerry
>>
>>
>>>Thanks and I look forward to participating in this community,
>>>
>>>Donnacha
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>>http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
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>>>"freebsd-questions-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
>>
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