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Date:      Sat, 08 Dec 2001 00:25:19 +0100
From:      Marko Zec <zec@tel.fer.hr>
To:        "Louis A. Mamakos" <louie@TransSys.COM>
Cc:        Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>, Sheldon Hearn <sheldonh@starjuice.net>, Kirk McKusick <mckusick@beastie.mckusick.com>, freebsd-arch@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Using a larger block size on large filesystems
Message-ID:  <3C114FDF.138E09A7@tel.fer.hr>
References:  <31807.1007732134@axl.seasidesoftware.co.za> <200112072257.fB7MvjE95211@apollo.backplane.com> <200112072311.fB7NB2723789@whizzo.transsys.com>

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"Louis A. Mamakos" wrote:

> While we're gonna be changing the default file system characteristics,
> how about having sysinstall create a reasonable size root file system
> for today's disks?  I think that if we're installing on a multi-gigabyte
> disk, a 200MB root file system isn't imposing very much.

Why would we want to do that? Putting unnecessary things on / is always a
bad idea, as root partition should remain small and as free of frequent RW
operations as possible. I would prefeer to see /tmp extracted from root fs
(as a mfs by default), much more than seing a huge / with lots of garbage in
it. Root should remain compact as it is more or less right now.

Marko


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