On 02/23/2015 10:15 PM, Pete Travis wrote:
On Feb 23, 2015 1:26 PM, "Chris Murphy" <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I don't think it came up in
this thread, but I've seen partition ordering cited in this context as
well: user wants /boot on sda1, / on sda2, /home on sda3, /opt on sda5,
/usr/local on /sda6, and so on. In most of those cases, there wasn't a
technical reason for this or some automated code with partition
expectations - just arbitrary preference.
Not quite. Sometimes there are technical reasons.
E.g. Some (all?) BIOSes aren't able to boot from non-primary partitions.
With a preinstalled WinXP often having occupied 3 primary partitions
(BOOT, WIN, RECOVER), Installing more than one Linux, required you to
install a linux boot partition as the 4th primary partition.
Similar restriction apply elsewhere. E.g. I have an older BIOS system
which for (at least to me) unknown reasons refuses to boot from
chained/cascaded grub partitions beyond some disk-limits.
In more complex multiboot configurations (e.g. several different linux
distros, several releases of the same distro, several different
configurations of the same distro), other aspects come into play, which
more or less are personal preference, such as keeping an OSs' partitions
consecutively together, whether to share or not to share boot or swap
partitions etc.
Experience tells, any sharing, such as sharing grub or swap partitions,
will fail in longer terms - Unfortunately, some distros' installers by
default do so and automatically try to reuse such partitions (IIRC,
anaconda still does so, till today)
So really, if this stuff bothers you, sit down, come up with a rational
justification for the feature you want, and send it in. Most
developers in this space do listen, but the normal rules of polite human
interaction and rational discourse do apply. "Because that's that I
want" isn't a good way to ask for someone else's time.
But the converse applies: "A tool which doesn't suffice my needs, will
not be my choice and will loose me as a customer"
Ralf
--
users mailing list
users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org