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Operating Systems Linux Are /home partitions worth it? Post 302863855 by Scott on Tuesday 15th of October 2013 09:16:16 AM
Old 10-15-2013
Quote:
Originally Posted by maerlyngb
Is this different from distro to distro?
It seems to be quite different between Ubuntu and Redhat.

The default layout in Redhat is to have two disk partitions: one for /boot and one for LVM, and in LVM goes / and swap.

Neither Ubuntu or Redhat has (and I assume no distributions have) a separate partition for /home. Ideally the "home" directory should exist in one place and be automounted to the various servers where and when it's needed.

With the exception of /boot - if everything else is using LVM - there's no requirement to have any separate partitions for anything, even though it's desirable to do so for the reasons given.

It's also important to know which filesystems should not be mounted on their own filesystems. Namely:
  • /etc
  • /bin
  • /sbin
  • /dev
  • /lib
  • /root
  • /sbin
  • /selinux
 

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PARTX(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  PARTX(8)

NAME
partx - telling the kernel about presence and numbering of on-disk partitions. SYNOPSIS
partx [-a|-d|-l] [--type TYPE] [--nr M-N] [partition] disk DESCRIPTION
Given a block device ( disk ) and a partition table type , try to parse the partition table, and list the contents. Optionally add or remove partitions. This is not an fdisk - adding and removing partitions is not a change of the disk, but just telling the kernel about presence and numbering of on-disk partitions. OPTIONS
-a add specified partitions or read disk and add all partitions -d delete specified or all partitions -l list partitions. Note that the all numbers are in 512-byte sectors. --type TYPE Specify the partition type -- dos, bsd, solaris, unixware or gpt. --nr M-N Specify the range of partitions (e.g --nr 2-4). SEE ALSO
addpart(8), delpart(8), fdisk(8), parted(8), partprobe(8) AVAILABILITY
The partx command is part of the util-linux-ng package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux-ng/. 11 Jan 2007 PARTX(8)
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