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root,home,boot and swap
Root, home, boot and swap. /usr, /home, /var
· /(root), home , var (variable), usr (user) and (swap)
Usually /home Sometimes /var If a lot of distro hopping happens, /boot
4 ----- Dhyan Tripathi You can have 4 primary partitions, or 3 primary partitions and one extended partition containing any number of logical partitions. While you can assign a drive letter to a partition, you can also map it as
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Office partitions would be relatively simple and cheap to build on your own. If that is not a good option, check out any office supply store such as www.officedepot.com or www.staples.com
Usually These 'Hidden Partitions Are Backup and Restore Partitions.
Depending on the environment Linux is running in, it doesn't need any partitions. A diskless workstation that boots over a network, a LiveCD, or a floppy disk do not require any partitions.In a typical server or workstation environment, however, one will usually have at least two partitions. One will be the "/" partition in which all files and directories are placed. The other is a swap partition that is used to page data in and out of memory.
form_title= Office Partitions form_header= Create more work space when you section off the office with partitions. How many partitions will you need?*= {10, 20, 30, 40, 50, More than 50} Why do you want the partitions?*= _ [50] What are the dimensions of the partitions?*= _ [50]
They are called directories and sub-directories. They also are called folders and sub-folders.
Depends, you can make as many partitions as you want.