For me, I usually just go with 40G for the '/' partition, my swap matches the size of my physical memory and /home gets the rest.

Swap needs to match the amount of your physical memory if you're planning on hibernating. If you don't plan to ever use hibernation, and you have a lot of physical memory, like 16G, then you could get away with a lot less swap, if you use any swap at all.


On 08/21/2018 01:22 PM, Daniel Crone wrote:
When installing ubuntu or other distributorstions, I usually install with 
default settings.
Now I am thinking of installing Accessible Coconut, and having a system 
partition and a separate home and swap.
Should I do this, how much space should each partition have?
Is there a guide somewhere one can read?

--
Christopher (CJ)
Chaltain at Gmail


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