On Sat, 2009-12-05 at 13:43 +0000, Timothy Murphy wrote: > Matthew Saltzman wrote: > > >> Actually, the complexity is that Fedora for some insane reason still > >> defaults to using LVM for everything *other* than /boot. This brings > >> no benefit to most users. > >> > > > > Well, it means I can have separate filesystems for things that I don't > > want overwritten if I reinstall (/home, /usr/local, /opt, /var/www, > > etc.) > > That's only 4, or 7 with / , /boot and swap. > How do you get up to 15? I don't (for systems with just one Linux installed). Add Windows (two partitions if you want separate system and data disks) and another *nix OS, though, and you're pressing the limit. > > In any case, the default partitioning doesn't give you 15 partitions, > so this seems an odd reason for recommending it. I don't recommend the default because it dumps everything into a single / filesystem, so reinstalling wipes out things that I'd want to preserve. I tend to use LVM for flexibility resizing. I don't spread LVs across devices though. -- Matthew Saltzman Clemson University Math Sciences mjs AT clemson DOT edu http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines