I'm inclined to disagree. Do you have any such experiences that you can tell us about, or post links to any references which support your recommendations?
Enterprise use: No, just read so in another forum.
Personal use: Yes, several first hand experiences, though, half of them were because encryption was included, but not the cause for the trouble in the first place.
Either way, for anyone coming from a Windows world, i dont want to make their first Linux experience more challenging than necessary. Specialy in a thread asking for help with plain partitions.
EDIT:
Edited previous post to state that that statement is ment for personal use.
I do have to admit, i do feel more save with an encrypted LVM than with an encrypted plain partition - but then again, its harder to get my own data back too. (backups aside)
I've been given a pre-installed RHEL 6.3 server that has just the root filesystem fairly empty, but filling the boot disk except for a small slice off for /boot. It's under VMWare, so using a clone I practised shrinking the root filesystem and splitting off /tmp, /var & /usr.
Oh dear. Splitting off /usr gave a few issues. The server did boot, but very slowly and none of the /etc/rc.d/rc2.d/S* scripts had run. Fortunately I could log on at the console and just run them and everything then was just fine.
My thought is that the filesystem /usr was not mounted so it just failed to run most of the boot - and I've been very lucky too.
I added the lines in blue to /etc/fstab is as follows:-
Have I correctly identified the problem? What did I do wrong?
Eventually I moved /usr back within the root filesystem and commented out it's entry in /etc/fstab and the next boot was better. I guess I was a little too aggressive. The boot is still rather slow, so perhaps I've messed up something else too.
Just adding my 2 cents here. maerlyngb, when I was a noob myself, I wish I could have come across this great book to help me get started - it would have made things a whole lot easier, especially with new concepts for someone coming from the Windows world. I don't know if that is your case, but I'd highly recommend that you download The Linux Command Line (which is available for free as in free pizza ) here. The last edition was published 2 months ago. Hope you find it useful.
One really good reason to use partitions, not just /home but beyond -- is if you don't store /home/, /var/, and /log/ inside /, then your root partition almost never needs writing to. And it's the one you actually need to boot. If / is okay, it can fsck the other partitions, but if root gets corrupted, it can't fix itself. And disk corruption lands wherever you've been writing to...
Imagine your machine's been forcibly powered off for some reason. With partitions, the system is able to start booting, mount /, and fsck the other filesystems, go through a few scary reboots and probably work again, minus whatever files inside /home/ the corruption hit.
Without partitions, you'd need a rescue CD to get it working again when / fails to mount. And when you check it with a rescue CD, you'd better hope the corruption hit nothing vital.
When I was experimenting with bleeding-edge Linux kernels this is mostly what kept me from trashing my system repeatedly.
Last edited by Corona688; 10-22-2013 at 07:14 PM..
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