Editing a New Partition To create a new partition, you must first assign the partition a mount point. If this is the root partition, enter /; if this is the swap partition, enter swap; if this is the boot partition, enter /boot; and so on. Next, enter the size of the partition. If most/all of your data will be written to the / (root) partition, you should create a partition at least 900MB (based on a workstation-class installation); custom- (choosing every package) and server-class installations should be larger. Your swap partition should be 16MB or higher (generally equal to the amount of RAM you have, not to exceed 256MB). Your /boot partition should be 16MB. When creating Linux partitions, the only partition that is not of the Linux native type is the swap partition, which is Linux swap. Selecting Grow to fill disk allows that partition to increase or decrease in size as files are added and/or removed from your system. Selecting this option for partitions, such as the / (root) partition, which will have data constantly written to it is always a good idea. Allowable Drives lets you select which hard drive(s) on your system to create that partition on. If you have two or more hard drives, but only want to create Linux partitions on one of them, make sure only that drive in particular is selected. Once you are satisfied with the partition's settings, select OK and press Space, and that partition will be created. Choose Cancel and press Space if you do not want to create the partition with those settings.