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this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2023
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Linux
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Nowadays you don't even need a /boot unless you're doing full disk encryption and I actually recommend keeping /boot on / if you're doing BTRFS root snapshots. Being able to include your kernel images in your snapshots makes rollbacks painlessly easy.
UEFI forum made it a requirement for motherboard constructors (hp, dell, msi...) to make their UEFI implementation to be able to at least read fat(12/16/32) filesystems. That is why you need a fat(12/16/32) partition flagged ESP (efi system partition) for holding your boot files.
So, I dont think you can do that unless you fall back to the old outdated BIOS or you have some *nix filesystem in your uefi implementation which I dont trust.
You're only partially correct.
/boot
doesn't have to also be your EFI partition. In fact, most distros by default will separate the two, with the EFI partition mounted at/boot/efi
and/boot
being a separateext4
based partition. My suggestion is that, if you're running BTRFS, you should merge/boot
and/
as one partition. You're still free to have a FAT32-based EFI mounted at/boot/efi
or better yet/efi
.I use systemd-boot and my mount point is /efi. /efi/EFI/ is where my bootloaders live.
If I rollback to an old enough snapshot, I have to reinstall my kernels from a chroot. It'd be cool if I could get around that.
Where's your /boot?
Separate FAT32 part.
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I've heard that you have to put in your encryption pw twice if you do it that way no?
Out of curiosity, what's stopping you from shrinking the partition and adding a swap partition?
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