On 06/09/2015 12:19 PM, John R Pierce wrote: > On 6/8/2015 5:08 PM, g wrote: >> ie, partition for boot, partition for swap, partition for /, partition >> home, partition for usr, partition for var, partition for home2, >> partition for what ever. > > > that model is not generally recommended anymore, at least not putting > /usr on its own partition, there's just too many issues with that > nowdays. I don't like putting /var in its own partition either as its > all too intertwined with root. the problem with lots of little > partitions is your freespace gets fragmented. > > /home in a dedicated partition, sure. > /var/lib/${DATABASE_OR_WEB_SERVER}, ditto... The real issue is that you cannot put /usr on a dedicated partition anymore as of CentOS 7. This is because /bin, /lib and /lib64 are symbolic linked in the /usr equivalents now. The (previous) purposes of having a separate /bin and /lib was so that programs and libs required at boot time could be run before the rest of the fs was mounted up if /usr were on a separate partition. Now they've been consolidated and symlinked so if you put /usr on a separate partition then the system won't be able to access critical apps during boot. You can thank Fedora for making that rather pointless change and breaking that capability. Peter _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos