72

What partitioning scheme do you recommend for a desktop? I've always created three or four primary partitions -- root, swap, home, and sometimes a separate boot partition. Ubuntu's default install offers LVMs. I've never had to add additional drives or space, so it never seemed like a big deal. Whenever I do a fresh install, though, I always think there might be a better way.

2
  • 1
    You may, for quick backups, include a backup partition (ext4) and use clonezilla for regular backups of the root directory (excluding home) before updating your system. Oct 2, 2014 at 10:19
  • That's a shame it's "opinion-based". That's true that some answers are opinion-based, but there should be a way to answer this question with arguments, making it non opinion-based.
    – Quidam
    Apr 24, 2020 at 12:17

11 Answers 11

78
  1. / (i.e. the root filesystem)
  2. swap
  3. /home

The biggest reason to do this is that you can do anything to your Ubuntu install and it won't affect your music/videos/whatever in your home. I especially enjoy this when a upgrade to a new Ubuntu version and the installation goes weird.

8
  • 4
    I think this is the best approach, as you can separate the OS install from your own data. However, the final answer will be "whatever suits you best". Jul 29, 2010 at 3:33
  • I didn't consider upgrades, probably because I mainly use ubuntu for work where I don't have a bunch of my personal files that need to stay around.. I like your approach best.
    – mfisch
    Jul 29, 2010 at 3:41
  • 3
    I also use this partitionning scheme. On your server I would also add a /backup one if some backups trategy is needed. Jul 29, 2010 at 8:50
  • 3
    for desktop purpose I always use this solution. 20-30% root / 70-80% home /home 1or2 GB swap Sep 10, 2010 at 11:45
  • 2
    @Evan: is it even possible to mount an NTFS partition as /home? Wouldnt that be chaos since NTFS has no linux permitions? Arent those needed for /home?
    – MestreLion
    May 27, 2011 at 0:33
54

Generally speaking, you shouldn't bother with a separate /home or /boot partition unless you're running multiple Linux distributions at once.

The Ubuntu installers for both the desktop CD and server/alternate CD have the ability to install over an existing system, preserving your home directory (and the local system driectories: /usr/local, /usr/src, and /var/local). This functionality also reuses the user ID and group ID of an existing user, if it has the same username as the user you're creating during installation.

To use this option when installing, choose the option for advanced partitioning, then select your existing / or /home partition. In the box that appears, make sure the filesystem selected matches the existing filesystem of that partition, and that the format box is not checked. Proceed as normal through the rest of the options.

In Ubuntu 10.10 we had hoped to add an option to the installer that detected when you had an existing copy of Ubuntu installed and offered to replace it with the newer version you were attempting to install (using the aforementioned functionality behind the scenes). While it did not make the final cut, it is likely to arrive in Ubuntu 11.04.

As for a separate /boot partition, that's a relic of hardware constraints of the past (the bootloader 1024 cylinder limit). I can think of no practical advantage a separate /boot would have on a modern system, and if not given an arguably excessive amount of space, it will potentially fill up and create problems of its own, given that Ubuntu does not automatically remove old kernels.

7
  • 3
    That has roughly the same effect as not checking the format box on /. It obviously doesn't format the partition, but it removes the system files present before starting the new install.
    – Evan
    Oct 12, 2010 at 19:39
  • 4
    There are numerical advantages to have a separate /home partition. You can perform a clean system install by formatting the root partitions but still keep your data. You can use either encryption or LVM on the /home, but you probably don't need that for the root one. For backup simplicity, you just make a dump of the /home partition. For power user, you can tweak your system and choose different file system for the applications and for the data (which make sense also). Etc.
    – Huygens
    Oct 12, 2010 at 20:11
  • 2
    Another important thing about /boot: if you have to recover the system, you can't be sure what your recovery tools will support. If you use something like XFS on LVM for your basic install, you can use a simple ext3 on the raw partition on /boot - which even the simplest recovery tools should support.
    – Mei
    Aug 23, 2011 at 14:24
  • 3
    Separated /boot partition became mandatory since the EFI/UEFI mess.
    – Braiam
    Sep 4, 2013 at 2:01
  • 2
    On MBR with preinstalled Windows, separated /boot allows you to remove Ubuntu without having to restore the Windows bootloader.
    – ignis
    Mar 28, 2014 at 7:47
13
  1. / (i.e. root filesystem) - for your operating system

  2. swap - swap space, which should be a little larger than the amount of RAM you have

  3. /home - for your data files

You only really need a separate /boot partition if you are using the alternate installer to set up full disk encryption. Currently the files in /boot need to be unencrypted so the operating system can start.

Generally speaking, you might add other partitions if you want to:

  1. Preserve the partition through a re-installation of the operating system - this is the usual reason for having a separate /home partition. A separate /usr/local or /opt might also be useful if you install lots of applications by compiling them from source.

  2. Limit the space that files on a partition can use - for example, a separate /home partition will prevent your operating system grinding to a halt when you fill up your home directory because you will still be able to log in as root and delete some files from your home directory.

  3. Use a different file system - I use a faster, less resilient file system for /tmp, but I keep /home on a slower, journaling file system for better data protection.

As suggested by Asmerito, you should consider putting all your partitions other than /boot on LVM. This will allow increased flexibility in resizing your partitions or even expanding them on to other disks. But you might not expect to require this functionality.

If you use the full disk encryption in the alternate installer, it will automatically create a /boot partition, a swap partition and another partition to hold the encrypted data. This encrypted partition is then used to hold a LVM partition. This LVM partition is then used to hold all your additional partitions. Initially this is just your root partition.

Hope this all helps.

1
  • The /root directory is for the root user, not the system.
    – Braiam
    Sep 27, 2013 at 18:54
10

Well, at a minimum you need a root partition and a swap partition. I highly recommend a home partition because then when you run out of space on your home partition, it won't affect your applications and more importantly, core components.

I discovered this the hard way when I ran out of space on the root partition - and I couldn't even start the Gnome desktop. I had to log in through the terminal and delete some stuff :(

5
  • 1
    That shouldn't happen in recent versions of Ubuntu - we now ensure there's always some room in /tmp (where these apps need to write).
    – RAOF
    Jul 29, 2010 at 4:19
  • @RAOF: This happened with Ubuntu 9.04. I'm of course using 10.04 now. Jul 29, 2010 at 4:50
  • 4
    You don't really need a swap partition either, if you don't plan on ever using suspend to disk. Sep 11, 2010 at 8:57
  • If the kernel crashes, it wants to write a memory dump. If there is not enough room, it won't (but it won't hurt anything otherwise). The kernel crash dump can then be analyzed later - it's copied from swap on reboot.
    – Mei
    Aug 23, 2011 at 14:27
  • Isn't the /swap very useful when you have very low RAM?
    – Quidam
    Apr 24, 2020 at 12:14
8

For server installations, best practice is to use LVM, so you can expand your storage space easily if you run out of free space. My suggestion is:

  1. /boot
  2. /
  3. LVM (if you add more disks, just resize LVM and there you go).

NOTE: if you use multi-user environment, it is good practice to create /home on LVM.

7

I use:

Primary partition:

  • /boot = 1 GB

Extended partition with LVM:

  • / = 5 GB
  • /var = 3 GB
  • /var/spool/cache = 2 GB ReiserFS (local squid disk cache for all my browsers)
  • /home = +500 GB for users including a public folder (shared both locally and remotely with smb).
  • /tmp = 128 MB (ramFS).
  • swap = twice my RAM.

I've been using this scheme for years and I'm very happy with it. Suggestions always welcomed.

2
  • You don't need that much for /boot. Unless you have loads of kernels installed. 256 MB is sufficient. If you have only 2 partitions the /boot and the LVM, then you don't need to create the LVM partition in an extended container as you can have up to 4 primary partition on the old-but-wide-spread MBR. Unless you don't have much RAM, you don't need the 2*RAM=swap scheme, if you intend to have hibernation and have sufficient RAM for your workload, then 1.1*RAM=swap is good enough. If you have 8 GB RAM and don't do heavy video edition, then you can have as little as 1 GB swap (or even no swap).
    – Huygens
    May 21, 2012 at 7:45
  • That's so many partitions.
    – Quidam
    Apr 24, 2020 at 12:15
6

On my home server, I prefer to create /, /swap, and /var/log. Since I do run a firewall and log all activity to /var/log, creating the log as a separate partition ensures that even if the logs run rampart, it won't block me from booting.

4

I always do a fresh install of newer versions of Ubuntu, so for me it makes sense to have a separate /home, since I won't have to backup my home folder every time.

2
  • 2
    I'll add that this was especially useful for me now that I've moved on to Arch Linux instead, so that I could just replace the operating system and keep all my data without much effort.
    – Victor
    Aug 6, 2014 at 22:12
  • 1
    The problem with many answers here, is that they don't use multiboot, and they consider only the case of people who don't use multiboot.
    – Quidam
    Apr 24, 2020 at 12:15
4

If you plan to install several distributions and want to use the same home folder you can install with a separate /home partition and use the same username for each distro. But if you are only using Ubuntu there is no need to have a separate /home partition.

1

On my Notebook Desktop:

  • 8GB allocated to / (i.e. root of the filesystem)

  • 2 times installed RAM allocated for swap (e.g. 3GB RAM = 6GB allocated for swap)

  • Remained of disk allocated to /home

2
  • I think the 2 times installed RAM rule doesn't apply anymore, with modern RAM computers.
    – Quidam
    Apr 24, 2020 at 12:16
  • Yeah that would mean 64 GB of swap space for me, not sure I'm willing to provide that. Probably 64 GB of RAM next build I make, so then that would be 128 GB of swap. That's a no.
    – Victor
    May 22, 2022 at 16:07
0
  • /root
  • swap
  • /mnt/storage -- somewhere to store any media that you download. If it gets full if won't fill up root. (I guess that this is similar to the idea of making /home a separate partition.)
1
  • Is it really useful to have /mnt as a separate partition?
    – Quidam
    Apr 24, 2020 at 12:16

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .