I have 2 drives in my machine. Linux right now is installed on 1/4 of the first drive and I am going to start moving parts of my 2nd drive, which is just games on Windows, to a 1/2 combo of NTFS and BTRFS. Essentially giving Linux more space as it replaces Windows as my gaming daily driver. With the eventual plan to move that entire 2nd drive over to BTRFS, and allow Windows to have 3/4 of the 1st drive for games that only run under it.
Curious how folks have set this up. Currently I have Steam, Heroic and Lutris installing to ~/Games. So it may make sense to mount my new drive there, but I am not sure that in home folder mounts make sense. I also realize I could potentially use BTRFS to make it look like my space is all one mount point vs multiple, but given the complexity of that filesystem I am worried there is a downside I am not aware of.
Any suggestions? What has worked for you for your setup?
I have 4 drives. An NVMe drive with four partitions:
500MB /boot
64GB Swap
100GB /
and the rest of the 1TB goes to
/home.
Then I have a 1TB SSD for games which is mounted to ~/Games.
Then I have two 1TB HDDs, one for
Music mounted to ~/Music
and another for
Torrents mounted to ~/Torrents.
I also have an 8TB HDD coming which will be another torrents drive
I wouldn't recommend it, but my current setup is I reach into the computer, unplug one SSD and plug in the other. Not the most high-tech dual boot but yeah
Probably could, but it's not worth the time or effort. I switch so rarely that even if it only took five minutes to configure, that's still more time than I spend switching in six months
I can't leave them both plugged in because Windows keeps complaining that my drive is damaged and it needs to run a disk check. The reason I don't set up grub or something else properly is mainly laziness. I use one OS for a project that lasts several months at a time so I don't switch between them that often. It's just not worth the time or effort to save two minutes every few months
Yeah, logical volumes has a teeny bit of overhead, same with RAID. both together means you can run older things but things that have a lot of textures loading you will see some drop.
I dont even want to think about how many partitions there are on my PC. windows has 4 or 5 just existing, then there's root, home and swap plus 2 more for the 2 other drives. So.. 9 or 10? its been a while since I had a reason to care.
As for what you should do, if you are replacing windows, it wont really matter what the format on the windows part is because youre going to need to back up the save data and reinstall those games eventually anyway. You cant really run the same game installs on both OSes.
I only use half of each drive for its stated purpose. Then I backup onto a different drive in case of hardware failure. (This obviously does not protect against fire or theft.) Not exactly what you asked, but I'd already started copy/pasting...