@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agoWhat are the best practices to partition a linux system with?message-square53fedilinkarrow-up1119arrow-down14
arrow-up1115arrow-down1message-squareWhat are the best practices to partition a linux system with?@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 year agomessage-square53fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish2•1 year agoThis is true. I used a 1gb boot partition on my Nixos install and every time I update it I need to delete all the old kernels/initrd and sometimes I even delete the one that’s currently running.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•edit-21 year agoI use NixOS, and read my comment again. /boot/efi is only for GRUB. /boot is where the actual kernels reside, and it isn’t on the EFI partition.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•1 year agoyeah that’s probably because systemd-boot only supports FAT
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This is true. I used a 1gb boot partition on my Nixos install and every time I update it I need to delete all the old kernels/initrd and sometimes I even delete the one that’s currently running.
I use NixOS, and read my comment again. /boot/efi is only for GRUB. /boot is where the actual kernels reside, and it isn’t on the EFI partition.
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yeah that’s probably because systemd-boot only supports FAT
*FAT32
I doubt it doesn’t support FAT16