Hi, I coming to FreeBSD from linux and very excited about it; please be understanding!
I've run out of patience with RHEL & other distros during the last few years and would like to investigate FreeBSD. At home I have an old empty machine with 1x 200G disk and separately 3 x 1T disks (under raid hardware). In the past I have placed the Linux OS partitions on the single disk and the data on /home, /var/db, /opt and /usr/local (for example) on the RAID group. Further, I have also partitioned the single OS disk in a fairly granular fashion, i.e. /, /usr, /var, /var/log, /tmp and /swp. Whilst a little old fashioned it seemed like the thought-out-way to do it. Now coming to FreeBSD it seems, from my reading, that things are little different.
1. I cannot find many detailed examples of placing FreeBSD OS on one disk and precious data on another disk (RAID or otherwise). Generally, the talk is of a single disk (RAID or otherwise) or a ZFS pool. I'm thinking I could use UFS on single and ZFS on the raid but ZFS seems far more involved; so most likely UFS on single and RAID group?
2. It seems FreeBSD uses far fewer partitions; this seems a little odd as the structure of the file system seems similar to linux; so why isn't the file system more divided (partitioned) as in the old-school way?
3. On my Linux boxes I have generally used an unencrypted USB stick for the /boot and entire disk encryption for the OS and data disks. It seems many Linux users do this but not for FreeBSD?
I would really appreciate some insight here to clear up my thought process. I am prepared to spend some time learning FreeBSD and don't just want to bang it onto a single disk!
Many thanks,
fabric.
I've run out of patience with RHEL & other distros during the last few years and would like to investigate FreeBSD. At home I have an old empty machine with 1x 200G disk and separately 3 x 1T disks (under raid hardware). In the past I have placed the Linux OS partitions on the single disk and the data on /home, /var/db, /opt and /usr/local (for example) on the RAID group. Further, I have also partitioned the single OS disk in a fairly granular fashion, i.e. /, /usr, /var, /var/log, /tmp and /swp. Whilst a little old fashioned it seemed like the thought-out-way to do it. Now coming to FreeBSD it seems, from my reading, that things are little different.
1. I cannot find many detailed examples of placing FreeBSD OS on one disk and precious data on another disk (RAID or otherwise). Generally, the talk is of a single disk (RAID or otherwise) or a ZFS pool. I'm thinking I could use UFS on single and ZFS on the raid but ZFS seems far more involved; so most likely UFS on single and RAID group?
2. It seems FreeBSD uses far fewer partitions; this seems a little odd as the structure of the file system seems similar to linux; so why isn't the file system more divided (partitioned) as in the old-school way?
3. On my Linux boxes I have generally used an unencrypted USB stick for the /boot and entire disk encryption for the OS and data disks. It seems many Linux users do this but not for FreeBSD?
I would really appreciate some insight here to clear up my thought process. I am prepared to spend some time learning FreeBSD and don't just want to bang it onto a single disk!
Many thanks,
fabric.