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What's your recommendation on drive partitioning schemes for a desktop and home server?

This thread is a continuation of my failed attempt to install ubuntu on a new pc. Ive decided to reinstall ubuntu by using a simpler partitioning scheme. The one i made had four partitions (/,/boot,/home and swap) and after the booting i got the error i describe in the hyperlink above.

Ultimately which is the most standard partitioning scheme for a simple home user who does not need to install something else in this particular hard drive(320 GB ) ??? Please be specific regarding the type of partitions needed (size,type,primary or logical etc)

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2 Answers 2

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two primary partitions as follows:

1) main, including root, boot and home most of the disk used except the space for the swap in (2) ext4 this should be set as bootable and root

2) swap partition i've used double the amount of ram for my machine (eg 4GB RAM, swap size 8GB) linux swap set to swap

Hope that helps

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  • the same scheme.
    – RusAlex
    Aug 23, 2011 at 8:44
  • where should i put the bootloader(MBR or /)? Aug 23, 2011 at 8:49
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    Or don't worry and just let the installer do the dirty thing for you... the best idea for a new user. Aug 23, 2011 at 8:51
  • I would not follow this setup myself though. I would always advice to have at least 2 partitions: no matter how you set it up 1 partition should always be your data storage (the partition where you put your important files on). Always seperate your file from your system. Always.
    – Rinzwind
    Aug 23, 2011 at 9:20
  • @Vaios bootloader can go on either but for least hassles put it on MBR because then it won't be short circuited by anything else that does put a loader in the MBR as this is usually checked before checking any of the partitions Aug 23, 2011 at 10:16
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While Dirk answer is the best option for a new user (don't worry about partitions), here is a quite popular and relative simple choice that I use:

  1. Swap: 3 Gb, as big as memory to make hibernate work).
  2. Root (/): 10 Gb, to keep the system files
  3. Home (/home): Rest of disk (148 Gb for me), to keep my files.

It let's me upgrade, use betas, reinstall and just play with the system while keeping my important files in their own place. It's quite similar to the windows option of using two partitions (C: for system and D: for data), but it also keeps some configuration options on /home.

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  • can u give the type of the partitions ? Like primary or logical , ext2 or etc Aug 23, 2011 at 9:04
  • why would that matter Vaios? and +1 Javier!
    – Rinzwind
    Aug 23, 2011 at 9:17
  • All are primary partitions. Aug 23, 2011 at 9:25

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