I just got a new laptop and installed Linux on it. I mainly run OpenSUSE.

Getting full encryption on both was a bit of a challenge and I had no idea what I’m doing. Will having the swap partition in the middle break things? Did I really need so many partitions (Mint and OpenSUSE don’t show up in eachother’s boot menu)?

I’m probably not gonna change this layout (because reinstallation seems like a pain) unless the swap partition’s position is a problem. I’m just curious how many mistakes I made.

  • Tenderizer78@lemmy.mlOP
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    1 day ago

    Yep, gonna clone and delete Windows 11.

    Library might work.

    I’m using Mint for sensitive matters, I want to keep it separate from my daily driver.

    I’ll basically just be using this laptop for web-browsing.

    I don’t really use hibernation. I’ll need to enable swap encryption though.

    • Amju Wolf@pawb.social
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      20 hours ago

      Yep, gonna clone and delete Windows 11.

      Why would you clone it first? Just nuke it if you don’t plan on using it. It has no value. You can always install it from scratch.

    • verdigris@lemmy.ml
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      20 hours ago

      If you don’t plan to expand the swap partition, I would recommend just deleting the swap partition – you could either make it a new ext4 and use LVM to combine it with the shared storage, or if you’re going to combine your EFI partitions you could grow your Mint partition to include both the SUSE EFI and the swap partition – and using a swap file instead, as another commenter mentioned. You honestly really don’t need swap space regardless with 16gb of RAM if you’re really just using this to run a web browser, but you can easily set up a swap file if you want one.