Am Samstag, 18. März 2006 16:06 schrieb houghi:
On Sat, Mar 18, 2006 at 03:49:58PM +0100, Frank-Michael Fischer wrote:
Let's assume users have got a DVD burning device. Then the default setup of a SUSE 10.1 installation puts intermediate burning files into /tmp.
I have a DVD burner, 10GB space and no problems.
Which is normally a directory under /. So just for this very purpose we almost 10GB free space. Otherwise users will just fail when duplicating a double layer DVD.
You are talking about a dual layer DVD burner. Most people do not have a dual layer burner. <snip>
Hmm, 3 of the 4 machines around me have dual-layer burners houghi ;-) And most machine bought today with a dual-layer burner built in will tend to have >150GB hard disks - laptops being an exception, the DL burnered laptop has only 80GB of disk space...
Therefore a "valid" configuration for a full desktop setup needs either a separate 10GB "/tmp "partition or at least a 16GB "/" partition. Anything else would get an ordinary user in trouble as soon as DVD burning comes into place.
So then please suggest how it should be calculated in your eyes. Also think that it should be workable on smaller HD's. Not everybody has a 250GB HD.
houghi
I think this is another topic for the (my?) Partitioning page... Everybody is going to have different requirements, so I am with you in a certain respect, continually growing the root partition for everybody because some people might need more is not the real answer, but there are a lot of applications that do need more space either on root or on one of the directories that default to being on the root partition. I'm logging into the Wiki as I write this, I'll start on writing a page for this... (I did a search and didn't find an existing one) I propose something like: Installation Planning Hardware Partitioning Software Package Selection Network Configuration ... Dave -- "I got to go figure," the tenant said. "We all got to figure. There's some way to stop this. It's not like lightning or earthquakes. We've got a bad thing made by men, and by God that's something we can change." - The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck