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+<B> Next:</B> <A NAME="tex2html1019" HREF="node57.html">Adding more disk space </A>
+<B>Up:</B> <A NAME="tex2html1017" HREF="node53.html">Allocating disk space</A>
+<B> Previous:</B> <A NAME="tex2html1011" HREF="node55.html">Space requirements</A>
+<BR> <P>
+<H2><A NAME="SECTION005103000000000000000">Examples of hard disk allocation</A></H2>
+<P>
+ I used to have a 109&nbsp;MB hard disk. Now I am using a 330&nbsp;MB
+ hard disk. I'll explain how and why I partitioned these
+ disks.
+<P>
+ The 109&nbsp;MB disk I partitioned in a lot of ways, when my needs
+ and the operating systems I used changed; I'll explain two
+ typical scenarios. First, I used to run MS-DOS
+ together with Linux. For that, I needed about 20&nbsp;MB of
+ hard disk, or just enough to have MS-DOS, a C compiler, an
+ editor, a few other utilities, the program I was working on,
+ and enough free disk space to not feel claustrophobic. For
+ Linux, I had a 10&nbsp;MB swap partition, and the rest, or 79&nbsp;MB,
+ was a single partition with all the files I had under
+ Linux. I experimented with having separate root,
+ <tt>/usr</tt><A NAME="1796">&#160;</A>, and <tt>/home</tt><A NAME="1798">&#160;</A> partitions, but there was never
+ enough free disk space in one piece to do much interesting.
+<P>
+ When I didn't need MS-DOS anymore, I repartitioned the disk so
+ that I had a 12&nbsp;MB swap partition, and again had the rest as a
+ single filesystem.
+<P>
+ The 330&nbsp;MB disk is partitioned into several partitions, like
+ this:
+ <BLOCKQUOTE> <BR><IMG WIDTH=189 HEIGHT=102 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="tabular1415" SRC="img10.gif"><BR></BLOCKQUOTE>
+ The scratch partition is for playing around with things that
+ require their own partition, e.g., trying different Linux
+ distributions, or comparing speeds of filesystems. When not
+ needed for anything else, it is used as swap space (I like to
+ have a <EM>lot</EM> of open windows).
+<P>
+<BR> <HR>
+<P><ADDRESS>
+<I>Lars Wirzenius <BR>
+Sat Nov 15 02:32:11 EET 1997</I>
+</ADDRESS>
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