TBSN
Senior member
I'm going to take the plunge and buy a cheap small ~30 GB drive for my laptop and use debian, most likely. I've been reading up on it and it seems installing Linux on an SSD *correctly* isn't very simple...
From what I understand, the important bits are partition alignment, using GPT instead of MBR partition style, and reducing the amount of unnecessary writes to disk.
I am not going to use multiple drives or anything fancy, but I'm considering not using a swap partition because I hear it is unnecessary on systems with >1GB of RAM.
Should I skip the swap partition? Will that minimize writes to disk? I have 2GB of RAM.
I've also read that its possible to mount the /tmp in RAM. What is the point of that? Has anyone done that?
Also I'm wondering how many and how large the partitions should be. Since I'm going to have only 30GB of space its like I'm travelling 10 years back in time...
I'm not worried about not having enough space because I only use this laptop for web browsing and writing.
From what I understand, the important bits are partition alignment, using GPT instead of MBR partition style, and reducing the amount of unnecessary writes to disk.
I am not going to use multiple drives or anything fancy, but I'm considering not using a swap partition because I hear it is unnecessary on systems with >1GB of RAM.
Should I skip the swap partition? Will that minimize writes to disk? I have 2GB of RAM.
I've also read that its possible to mount the /tmp in RAM. What is the point of that? Has anyone done that?
Also I'm wondering how many and how large the partitions should be. Since I'm going to have only 30GB of space its like I'm travelling 10 years back in time...
I'm not worried about not having enough space because I only use this laptop for web browsing and writing.