Sta kaze ovo...
Do You Need a Separate Home Partition?
If you've
installed Ubuntu and chose the default options while installing Ubuntu, you might not realize it but you won't have a home partition. Ubuntu generally creates just two partitions; root and swap.
The main reason for having a home partition is to separate your user files and configuration files from the operating system files.
By separating your operating system files from your user files, you're able to upgrade your operating system without fear of losing your photos, music, videos, and other files.
Other reasons it's better to create a separate home partition:
- Migrating to a large home partition later is much easier.
- If you store a very large number of small files in your home folder, it could slow overall access to the root filesystem files as well.
- If the home partition completely fills up, the file system won't crash.
- In the case of a failed system upgrade, all data on your home partition remains safe.
- Reinstalling the OS is much faster when all data files are on a separate home partition.
- Some swap and file system areas like temporary files or swap files are accessed frequently. Storing the home partition on a fast SSD drive and keeping swap and root partitions on a standard drive can extend the life of your SSD drive.
Ja uvek idem na custom instalaciju , napravim root i to je to.
Linux mi nije main OS ... svakako kome jeste naravno da treba da pravi home particiju i ako hoce swap.
Samo treba znati sta radis ... jer lako moze prilikom instalacije da shebes sve
zato nubinama preporuka na posebnom disku drugi OS.
A backup kako win-a tako i linuxa uvek za nedaj Boze