[SunRescue] Max capacity of harddisk supported by SS20
PaulTheodoropoulospaul at anastrophe.com
PaulTheodoropoulospaul at anastrophe.com
Fri Jul 21 09:57:27 CDT 2000
There have been 'religious' wars going on in comp.unix.solaris for
years now on the various partitioning philosophies. In my opinion,
the issue is moot if you are using a recent revision of Solaris - 7
or 8 - since journaling is built into the filesystem.
I've been running production systems for years now with just one
BigAss(tm) root partition, along with swap. Once set up, I turn on
logging in /etc/vfstab, and then it's nothing but smooth sailing.
If the system is mission-critical, I mirror the boot disk, and
still use journalling. Simplify, simplify, simplify. I'm currently
mentoring a junior admin, and being able to simply say that the
disk layout will always be root on /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s0 and swap on
/dev/dsk/c0t0d0s1 eliminates confusion and uncertainty.
When the current technologies are taken together - large, fast
disks with excellent MTBF, along with a mature OS that includes
journalling - and the option to mirror in software when it's
mission-critical - I think the scale tips in favor of a simple
root-and-swap layout.
But - as always - this is just an opinion! There's no laws
compelling anyone to partition their disks in any particular way,
so if someone wants to set up a six gig partition for
/usr/ucb, well heck - more power to them.
regards,
paul
At 11:48 PM 7/20/00, you wrote:
>The way I see it, this is not a very good idea. The more you put
>in one
>filesystem, the greater the risk that the file system gets
>corrupted. By keeping
>all more or less frequently changing data on separate partitions
>(/home, /var,
>/usr, /opt), your chances of being left with an inoperable system
>are somewhat
>smaller. If you install a lot of free-/shareware software, keep
>your /usr
>partition large. If you use a lot of commercial Sun software, keep
>your /opt
>partition large.
>
>Camiel.
-----------------------------------
Paul Theodoropoulos paul at atgi.net
Senior Unix Systems Administrator
Advanced Telcom Group, Inc.
Santa Rosa, California
Work: http://www.atgi.net
Play: http://www.anastrophe.com
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