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Date:      Thu, 20 Dec 2007 21:12:32 +0100
From:      Nikola =?UTF-8?B?TGXEjWnEhw==?= <nikola.lecic@anthesphoria.net>
To:        "Alexander Rudyk (Akvelon)" <v-alrudy@microsoft.com>
Cc:        FreeBSD-questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: Partitions size for 80GB HDD and 2GB RAM
Message-ID:  <20071220211232.427f6a41@anthesphoria.net>
In-Reply-To: <3659EBC278926E47B1802BE0129D1B6007D8E204FA@NA-EXMSG-C123.redmond.corp.microsoft.com>
References:  <3659EBC278926E47B1802BE0129D1B6007D8AD3AC8@NA-EXMSG-C123.redmond.corp.microsoft.com> <20071220195636.116ac9bb@anthesphoria.net> <3659EBC278926E47B1802BE0129D1B6007D8E204FA@NA-EXMSG-C123.redmond.corp.microsoft.com>

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On Thu, 20 Dec 2007 11:26:41 -0800
"Alexander Rudyk (Akvelon)" <v-alrudy@microsoft.com> wrote:
=20
> Nikola,
>=20
> Thank you for your extender answer. I have two more comments.
>=20
> Did you consider /var as your email db partition. I really don=E2=80=99t
> know how big will be my mail db on freebsd, but after half of year
> I have about 4GB outlook mail db. So 1GB for /var might be not enough
> in my case.

The hier(7) manpage is very useful to understand the default directory
structure:

  http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=3Dhier&apropos=3D0&sektion=3D0&m=
anpath=3DFreeBSD+6.2-RELEASE&format=3Dhtml

As for mail, it depends on how you plan to receive and handle it; if you
just download mail from pop3 account, it will be stored in your home by
a mail client (this goes as well for mail you export from Outlook to
e.g. Thunderbird). For locally (system) delivered mail, /var/spool is
the default place, but unless you want yo use your laptop as a mail
server, it's unlikely you will store your mail there.

> Having /home as part of /usr is the good point. But in case of backup
> it make sense to have /home as separate partition. What you think
> about this?

Of course it's very useful for backups. I just thought it was useful to
warn you about how much space /usr/ports could need because the default
installation procedure on FreeBSD is to compile sources (of thirs
party applications and of FreeBSD itself).

As a useful example on how much space you might need, here are rough
sizes on my home desktop computer, used for everyday work. I have ~850
ports installed.

  /usr/ports        ~2G (with current distfiles and packages that happen
                         to be there + you will need at least 2-3G for
                         large upgrades, sometimes > 10G)
  /usr/local        ~5G (third party applications + additions such as
                         TeXLive =3D ~1G)
  /usr/home        ~20G
  ---------------------
  /usr total used: ~30G (includes FreeBSD itself + some other smaller
                         storages)

If you plan to build FreeBSD itself in the future, then /usr must be
even bigger. If all this leaves enough room for /home for you, then
it's certainly very useful to make it separate partition.

--=20
Nikola Le=C4=8Di=C4=87 :: =D0=9D=D0=B8=D0=BA=D0=BE=D0=BB=D0=B0 =D0=9B=D0=B5=
=D1=87=D0=B8=D1=9B



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