From owner-freebsd-questions Sun Mar 30 08:31:59 1997 Return-Path: Received: (from root@localhost) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) id IAA00478 for questions-outgoing; Sun, 30 Mar 1997 08:31:59 -0800 (PST) Received: from gatekeeper.barcode.co.il (gatekeeper.barcode.co.il [192.116.93.17]) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id IAA00473 for ; Sun, 30 Mar 1997 08:31:53 -0800 (PST) Received: (from nadav@localhost) by gatekeeper.barcode.co.il (8.7.5/8.6.12) id TAA23160; Sun, 30 Mar 1997 19:29:54 +0300 (IDT) Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 19:29:54 +0300 (IDT) From: Nadav Eiron To: jadeite cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: your mail In-Reply-To: Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-questions@freebsd.org X-Loop: FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk On Sun, 30 Mar 1997, jadeite wrote: > what is the rule of thumb for configuring the sizes of the SWAP, /, and > /var filesystems? > what types of programs use the SWAP a lot? > > For / and /var, the rule of thumb depends on what you do. For /, you can probably get along with a couple of tens on MB. I usually put 20-40MB for /. For /var, it depends. What goes in there is normally the mail spool, logs from all your daemons and, if you have a news server, the news spool. News can take multiple GBs for /var. For the rest, it depends mainly on how much mail/logs you expect to have. If you have a web/ftp sites with hundreds of thousands of hits aday and you log it all, it can also sum up to handreds of MBs for a couple of weeks. Other then that there's very little that goes in there, so a small personal workstation can get along with ~16MB. For swap, the main consumers are: Netscape gcc (x)emacs X11 anything complicated and big Nadav