Hi,
I plan a clean install of Ubuntu 14.04 LTS on my system with a 320 GB HDD, 2 GB of physical RAM.
My question is how do I partition it, size wise and how many partitions recall /root...........???
Thanks.
Hi,
I plan a clean install of Ubuntu 14.04 LTS on my system with a 320 GB HDD, 2 GB of physical RAM.
My question is how do I partition it, size wise and how many partitions recall /root...........???
Thanks.
XPS1710, CPU T7200 @2.00GHZ x 4 GiB RAM, 1900x1200,
Nvidia GeForce 7600 512 MB.
If I were you then I would have done something like:
Root Partition : Partition where ubuntu will be installed with ext4 partiton type : 100GB.
Swap Partition : Partiton for swap usage : 4GB.
Other Partition : Partition for storing other data eg back-up, huge softwares, workspace back-up etc.
there are probably as many answers to this question as there are members on the forum.
I would partition it like this.
sda1 2 gb swap
sda2 40 gb /
sda3 100gb home
balance stroage. a place to keep important things incase of the need to reinstall.
The only dumb question is the one not asked.
In service to the Dream
Is this just Ubuntu? Or dual boot?
My first suggestion is /, /home and swap.
My somewhat more advanced suggestion is /, /mnt/data, swap. But you cannot create the data partition during install.
You do have to use Something Else to either create partitions or choose mount points for partitions already created. All auto install options just create / (root) and swap.
For the Total space you want for Ubuntu:
Ubuntu's standard install is just / (root) & swap, but it is better to add another partition for /home if allocating over 30GB.:
Only if gpt - all partitions in gpt are primary:
gpt: 300 MB efi FAT32 w/boot flag (for UEFI boot or future use for UEFI, you only can have one per drive, so if already existing do not attempt another)
gpt: 1 MB No Format w/bios_grub flag (for BIOS boot not required for UEFI)
for gpt(GUID) or MBR(msdos) partitioning
Ubuntu partitions - smaller root only where hard drive space is limited.
If total space less than about 30GB just use / not separate /home or standard install.
1. 10-25 GB Mountpoint / primary or logical beginning ext4
2. all but 2 GB Mountpoint /home logical beginning ext4
3. 2 GB Mountpoint swap logical
Depending on how much memory you have you may not absolutely need swap but having some is still recommended. I do not hibernate (boots fast enough for me) but if hibernating then you need swap equal to RAM in GiB not GB. And if dual booting with windows a shared NTFS partition is also recommended. But you usually cannot create that as part of the install, just leave some space. Or partition in advance (recommended).
One advantage of partitioning in advance is that the installer will use the swap space to speed up the install. Thanks Herman for the tip.
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DiskSpace
You may not not full Ubuntu. My laptop has similar specs but 1.5GB of RAM. I find Unity so slow as to be unusable. But I do install full Ubuntu and then change to gnome-panel, or fallback/flashback which is similar to the old gnome2 top & bottom panels with menus. Other suggestions are Lubuntu or Xubuntu.
UEFI boot install & repair info - Regularly Updated :
https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2147295
Please use Thread Tools above first post to change to [Solved] when/if answered completely.
Single not dual boot.
XPS1710, CPU T7200 @2.00GHZ x 4 GiB RAM, 1900x1200,
Nvidia GeForce 7600 512 MB.
Should be at least more than that. As we may all suggest two or three correct options.there are probably as many answers to this question as there are members on the forum.
UEFI boot install & repair info - Regularly Updated :
https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2147295
Please use Thread Tools above first post to change to [Solved] when/if answered completely.
All you really need is a '/' partition and a swap partition.
Note that the name of the partion is '/', not '/root'.
Some folks worry and fret about swap partitions. I don't. They are used when a system runs out of RAM it can allocate to a program that asks the OS for more RAM. You don't have much RAM, so create a swap partition of 2-4 gigs.
A number of standard directories are created and used in Linux. Any of them can, in effect, be mapped to one partition that has the same name. So, you might create a 'home' partition during the install, and the /home directory will be created on it.
The advantage of creating a separate 'home' partition is this: if you ever change to a new Linux distribution, you can leave the existing home partition in place, preserving the files on it.
Lots of helpful ideas and thoughts, thanks. Partitioning is scary for a newbie
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