When laying out file systems, you need to consider possible conflicting demands. Here are some suggestions:
Distribute the work load as evenly as possible among different I/O systems and disk drives. Distribute /export/home and swap space evenly across disks.
Keep pieces of projects or members of groups within the same file system.
Use as few file systems per disk as possible. On the system (or boot) disk, you should have three file systems: /, /usr, and swap space. On other disks, create one or, at most, two file systems. Fewer, roomier file systems cause less file fragmentation than many small, over-crowded file systems. Higher-capacity tape drives and the ability of ufsdump to handle multiple volumes make it easier to back up larger file systems.
If you have some users who consistently create very small files, consider creating a separate file system with more inodes. However, most sites do not need to be concerned about keeping similar types of user files in the same file system.
See Chapter 27, Creating File Systems (Tasks) for information on default file system parameters as well as procedures for creating new UFS file systems.