Will be installing either Mint or Pop_OS on a new laptop which has a 512gb SSD. Will keep Windows for gaming, at least for now, with the games installed on an external HD. But otherwise, this is to experiment with living in Linux.

I understand that I can unallocate HD space from Windows in order to make room for the LInux OS, leaving at least 25 or 30gb for the Linux OS itself.

Do I then extend that space further, so to speak, to allow for any other programs I might install as well as for data? Do I create a third partition for data that will be shared between the two OS?

What’s a reasonable breakdown?

e.g.
Windows 100gb; Linux 400gb or
Win 100gb; Linux 30gb; Data (NTFS) 370gb?

  • Random Dent
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    252 years ago

    Also, I’d say install Windows first, then Linux. Windows assumes it’s the only OS in the universe and tends to steamroll over the whole boot setup, so I’ve found it much easier to just let Windows do whatever it wants first, then fix it with Linux afterwards.

  • @asal@lemmy.world
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    132 years ago

    I know this is not an answer to your question, but I’ve found everything to be immensely easier with a second drive. I’ve screwed my pooch before!

    • Ken Oh
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      92 years ago

      This is my comment. 2 drives and you won’t have to worry.

      • speckOP
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        22 years ago

        This is with a laptop. So one would have to be on an external drive. That wouldn’t slow it down?

        • Ken Oh
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          12 years ago

          I would check out your laptop, especially if it’s somewhat new. I have one that is dual booting from an M.2 NVMe drive and a SATA SSD. Even if it didnt, I have easy panels that pop off when I wanted to swap.

  • @fraddron@lemmy.world
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    72 years ago

    Default boot to Linux! I had dual boot set up for years and never actually booted into Linux. Once I changed the default to Linux I never booted into windows again (and eventually deleted that partition)

  • Mactan
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    62 years ago

    windows can and will destroy your bootloader at least once, show it no mercy

  • sudo_su
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    42 years ago

    Keep a minimum of 30GB free, for Windows update processes on the windows system partition. I don’t how much the windows installation counts in space, but add that to the 30gb free space. I would recommend to have a extra partition for the games on NTFS and move your steam, epic, ubisoft, whatever library to that partition.

    I have tried to use the same gaming partition between Linux and Windows, but failed every time. In the worst case this can alter your Windows privileges. At least I had this issue.

    Currently I’m using Windows only for 2 games: Space Engineers and Empyrion. The rest works with better performance on Linux. Satisfactory, Ark survival, Elder Scrolls Online have more FPS on Linux with the same settings. I have to use a nvidia 1050 Ti in my laptop. With a AMD GPU the situation is a lot better on Linux.

    I’m not a hardcore gamer, mostly im coding here and there. But sometimes gaming is a must have.

    • speckOP
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      12 years ago

      I was going to put games on an external hard drive, at least for Windows side. Maybe I should also partition the external HD and have an ext4 formatted partition for when I decide to game on the Linux side?

      • sudo_su
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        12 years ago

        Yes. Because some games work only with proper privileges. This can get complicated on NTFS.

  • Yuumi
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    32 years ago

    If you plan on using windows only for games and absolutely nothing else then there isn’t much of a point in making a shared partition between the two OS’es. Just keep them separate, to each partition its own. (So your first example win 100gb, Linux 400gb is what I personally would go with)

  • @jonno@discuss.tchncs.de
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    22 years ago

    Sound great and I went the same way for a while. Just be aware that steam on Linux can have issues with ntfs partitions. So I also went the the two drive route, much less of a headache.

    • speckOP
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      12 years ago

      Just out of curiosity, if the games are on an external hard drive with a different format does that skirt the issue between Linux steam and ntfs?

  • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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    2 years ago

    Many people do dual drives, but if you install linux second and it is a distro thay uses grub with probe foreign OS them you don’t really need two drives. make space on windows drive, in the linux installer create another boot partition, root and home. You set bios to boot Linux grub. Grub will launch and give you linux or choice to chainload to Windows. Windows is unaware it is getting kicked off by grub so the Windows and Lunux boot partitions leave each other alone. i can’t vouch for every distro letting you setup like this but this is how my OoenSUSE has been since 2017

  • @Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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    22 years ago

    External drive as in via USB? You folks must have had better experiences than I, because I have absolutely zero faith in the USB interface.

    • speckOP
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      12 years ago

      I appreciate the tips, thank you. When you mention making a separate home partition in Linux: my understanding is that we unallocate hard drive space from Windows and, when we first install Linux, it will use that free space to make its own partition. Are you referring to another step, beyond that?

        • speckOP
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          12 years ago

          I looked into this little bit.

          So on a 512gb hd an e.g. breakdown:

          Windows 150gb
          Linux / 30gb
          Linux /home ? 70gb
          Data (nfts format, shared with both os) 262gb (or whatever is actually left over)

          (I’ll have an external HD for games)

            • speckOP
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              12 years ago

              Huh. I was going to have an external HD for games with two partitions: a larger one for PC, formatted in ntfs, and a smaller one for Linux, for if I want to try gaming with it, and formatted in ext4. You’re suggesting that both should be in exfat, instead?

  • @Mesophar@lemm.ee
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    22 years ago

    I just did this with my desktop pc when I added a second drive for additional storage. Instead of using it as additional storage for windows like I initially intended, I decided to dual boot with Mint on the second drive.

    So far, I haven’t had any issue with gaming on Mint, either! Granted, most of the games I play are through Steam and either work with Proton or are native Linux to begin with. I did install a few games with Lutris, though, and works fine so far. Sea of Thieves, Astroneer, Slay the Spire, Deep Rock Galactic, are all working out of the box.

    Only thing I haven’t attempted yet are multiplayer games with active anti-cheat, like LoL or CS:2. If those are the sorts of games you regularly play, you’ll probably be better off in the Windows partition/drive, but have fun experimenting in Linux!

    • speckOP
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      12 years ago

      Main game rn is BG3. And ofc want to get back into playing modded Skyrim. There are definitely other, pc only games that are on my list, coming from a Mac. But nothing like LoL or CS:2

        • speckOP
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          12 years ago

          I plan to look into this ofc, but if the games are on an external hd, would Linux use the same files as Windows? I.e. you don’t need two copies of the game so long as it’s on a format like NTFS that both can read? Was wondering whether to partition the external HD to have a Windows side and then a Linux side, with the latter formatted to ext4

          • @Mesophar@lemm.ee
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            12 years ago

            In theory you should be able to do that! I think Proton has some issues with NTFS, mostly when installing or updating, but with a little research and tweaking you should be able to get it to run smoothly. I opted to keep them fully separate and just installed certain games twice, but am also using this as a test run before diving into full daily driver Linux when I build a new system in the spring, so longevity of my storage drives wasn’t a concern.

            • speckOP
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              12 years ago

              I think that’s where I’m at, too, where I don’t mind have to re-do certain things down the road if I switch approaches or commit to a certain direction

  • @LifeCoffeeGaming@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Started dual booting Pop a few weeks ago, kept Windows for gaming for the same concern, but if you’ve got the major of your games in stream, Proton really is amazing. Had 0 issues with any game so far.

    Check out Protondb and see if your current games are supported or not.

    Once I’m 100% comfortable with Linux again I’ll probably bin of windows forever.

    I already had a Windows install so letting Windows manage the bootloader seemed easier as I know it can cause issues if it thinks it’s not the OS as others have said.

    • speckOP
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      12 years ago

      All my games are off steam currently lol. I’m hearing the collective message of how feasible Linux is for gaming, tho

      Keeping windows is also an “in case” measure because I’m ignorant with both OS, at this point: in case some use case comes up where having Windows is easiest to get something done. My goal is to keep to Linux as much as possible. Purely because I want to become familiar with it