After recently boasting about how many distros I had in the same btrfs on a 240 GB SSD, I realized that they were all ubuntu derivatives, kind of watering down my point.
Last year I did a gentoo install to a partition on an old hard disc, to check something out. It was a vanilla gentoo, with a 4.19 kernel, but no DE or X11.
Now it is possible to do a gentoo install to btrfs subvolumes. With gentoo it's like building a house brick by brick, carrying every brick, beam, joist, glass pane et cetera to its place yourself, and if you know what you're doing you can use a btrfs at the appropriate times. But I didn't know what I was doing, I was following the step by step instructions in the wiki, pages of them (note to self, have two computers, or print them all out).
So, I created a subvolume, @gentoo, used cp -a to copy the gentoo root to it, fixed up the /etc/fstab, and copied a grub menu entry adding rootflags=subvol=@gentoo to the linux line.
No trouble, and it boots much more quickly.
Last year I did a gentoo install to a partition on an old hard disc, to check something out. It was a vanilla gentoo, with a 4.19 kernel, but no DE or X11.
Now it is possible to do a gentoo install to btrfs subvolumes. With gentoo it's like building a house brick by brick, carrying every brick, beam, joist, glass pane et cetera to its place yourself, and if you know what you're doing you can use a btrfs at the appropriate times. But I didn't know what I was doing, I was following the step by step instructions in the wiki, pages of them (note to self, have two computers, or print them all out).
So, I created a subvolume, @gentoo, used cp -a to copy the gentoo root to it, fixed up the /etc/fstab, and copied a grub menu entry adding rootflags=subvol=@gentoo to the linux line.
No trouble, and it boots much more quickly.
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