I've been a fan of Linux for almost as long as there has been Linux, but mostly constrained to Windows because of being a Windows developer. Well, that situation no longer formally holds, and Windows 10 is the last and most fatal of a long line of Microsoft offenses, so I've started the process of migrating my main Windows 8.1 laptop to Linux. Much of that has been figuring out how to replace apps. For example, I'm learning Blender now as a replacement for 3DS Max, which remains stubbornly Linux-resistant. I think I'll like it better, anyway.
Because of the large number of tools in my workflow (I'm into a bit of everything), I'd like to take the transition carefully to make sure I have all the bases covered and not screw up productivity. I'm thinking I'd like to split off 100GB or so from my primary Windows partition and allocate it as follows:
/boot (250MB ext4)
swap (8GB)
...with the rest assigned to LVM split up between / and /home.
I'm thinking that as time progresses and more of my work is transitioned to Linux, I can further shrink the Windows partition and allocate that space to LVM without too much complication, eventually leaving a vestigial Windows partition for games and Windows-only apps with no Linux substitute, like DAZ Studio. But as LVM is fairly new to me, I'd like to ask if anyone can see any pitfalls that I'm not aware of. I'm sure someone else has gone this route, or tried to, but Google seems oddly quiet on the matter. I haven't used Linux for about three years now, and haven't developed for it in probably 12.
Because of the large number of tools in my workflow (I'm into a bit of everything), I'd like to take the transition carefully to make sure I have all the bases covered and not screw up productivity. I'm thinking I'd like to split off 100GB or so from my primary Windows partition and allocate it as follows:
/boot (250MB ext4)
swap (8GB)
...with the rest assigned to LVM split up between / and /home.
I'm thinking that as time progresses and more of my work is transitioned to Linux, I can further shrink the Windows partition and allocate that space to LVM without too much complication, eventually leaving a vestigial Windows partition for games and Windows-only apps with no Linux substitute, like DAZ Studio. But as LVM is fairly new to me, I'd like to ask if anyone can see any pitfalls that I'm not aware of. I'm sure someone else has gone this route, or tried to, but Google seems oddly quiet on the matter. I haven't used Linux for about three years now, and haven't developed for it in probably 12.
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