• lemmyvore
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    7 months ago

    But why /boot?

    I would much rather split out /home if I’m going to split anything, so it can go through a future reinstall more smoothly. With /var being a more distant second candidate, because I’ve been burnt on several occasions by various programs eating up all disk space somewhere under it.

      • lemmyvore
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        7 months ago

        Isn’t EFI a separate partition? Different from /boot?

        • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          They can be the same partition, they are for different purposes though. EFI holds the EFI binaries as the name implies, while /boot holds the initrd, kernel, and the bootloader config files.

          If they are the same partition, /boot needs to be formatted as FAT32 and have EFI as a subdirectory. Otherwise they can be separate partitions, either way the partition that contains the EFI directory needs to be formatted as FAT32.

      • lemmyvore
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        7 months ago

        How do btrfs snapshots work?

        I use borg to take snapshots from / and /home because I can be selective (it has include and exclude patterns, like rsync). Also because it does deduplication (at file and chunk level too, saves a ton of space) and compression. And of course a big factor is that I can keep the backups somewhere else.

        I’ve looked into zfs snapshots but they seem really limited in comparison. Good for recovering accidental deletes or changes if you catch on soon enough, but not very useful otherwise.

    • 1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 months ago

      Hey it’s the one person who did what who is yet to have their home or / partition run out then realise they can’t expand it without formatting over the other /s

      But seriously just /boot as a separate partition because it’s a fairly constant & known size, and allows you to make it be a simpler filesystem which helps with recovery, both because if the bootloader dies you can both easily access and recover the /boot partition most of the time, unlike with more complex/bigger filesystems, and you can have a journaling filesystem like xfs or btrfs on your main partition which reduces the chances of things being corrupted, generally meaning you won’t need to reinstall

      That said if you want to change distro or something you can keep your home directory via a delicate dance with chroot which is the one thing /home may be good for avoiding, but you’ll likely break all your configs etc either way