2008/3/10 Paul W. Frields <stickster(a)gmail.com>:
On Mon, 2008-03-10 at 14:19 +0100, Valent Turkovic wrote:
> 2008/3/10 Jesse Keating <jkeating(a)redhat.com>:
> > On Mon, 2008-03-10 at 13:34 +0100, Valent Turkovic wrote:
> > > Is that on purpose and if it why?
> >
> > Guessing how much space you'll need in your non /home partitions over
> > time is difficult. Only you know how your install will be used. That's
> > why the installer defaults to the easiest thing to guess; How much boot
> > space you'll need, and how much swap space. However since you know how
> > your install is going to be used, you are best to make those estimations
> > and setup your /home as you want it.
> >
> > --
> > Jesse Keating
> > Fedora -- All my bits are free, are yours?
>
> Fedora Live CD target audience are desktop users, right? I as a
> desktop user haven't seen any need for / partiton over 8-10 GB.
> Servers, and other fedora usages may need some other partition schemes
> but a default home user has huge benefits from a dedicated /home
> partition.
>
> It is probable that new users aren't aware that /home partition as a
> dedicated partition has advantages and it would be best if anaconda
> makes the "smart" partition scheme in which /home is a separate
> partition in LVM volume, or a logical partition. Separate home has
> lots of advantages that you are aware of, so why not just change the
> partition scheme to take advantage of that?
Those users could read the Installation Guide, which talks about this
exact situation and how to set up partitions that make sense. I don't
think it's unreasonable to expect that new users who are going to
install should read the document that tells them how to do it. There's
not a lot we can do for people who won't read.
Where on the Live CD can I see the Installation Guide?
Valent.
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