Hello I’m Doctor_Rex after 2 posts asking multiple questions I have finally installed Fedora KDE 39 on my desktop.
Previous Posts:
I’m ready to install Linux, but I’d like your opinion first
My Windows 10 install broke, but I’m hesitant to switch to Linux.
I would show you an image of my neofetch but lemmy won’t let me place it due to file size so ¯_(ツ)_/¯.
I would have installed it sooner but due to poor decisions I made when making this PC I had to wait for a Linux compatible WiFi card to arrived.
My experience with Fedora KDE:
I’ve been using Fedora for about 2 days now and, to a degree, it’s working just fine, KDE is slick and is easy to customize. Fedora itself works just fine and it’s discover store works well enough. That said I need some extra help before I fully dedicate myself to daily driving Fedora.
I’d just like to clarify that I love Linux, I love owing my computer, and I love having so much control over it, and I am completely ready to get my hands dirty in order to make it work, to an extent, as more that anything I want a working computer. I’d also like to clarify that I’m sticking to Fedora KDE 39 and am not looking for suggestions.
Questions:
Can I partition /home directory in a different drive and still fuction?
I own one 500GiB nvme ssd, which is where I want to place my root, boot, var, etc, and I have one 1000GiB(1TiB) sata ssd which is where I would like to place my /home directory. I was originally going to do this but I decided to ignore my 1000GiB drive for now just to test Fedora. Would there be any unforseen complications with this set up?
Transferring /home directory without reinstalling Linux?
After running low on storage space on Windows 10 I have considered upgrading to a larger drive, 2-4 TiB. With my switch to Linux I’d like to know if there is an easy way to take all my files from my previous drive into the new one with all the correct paths configured, without reinstalling Linux?
Best way to partition my / and /home directories?
I’m not asking about btrfs or anything like that, I simply want to know, how to best partition my system. I’ve read and seen multiple tutorials about partitioning systems but many of them add other stuff like partitioning /var and /boot, and adding some unformatted space. I simply want to seperate my / and /home without anything extra. How would I best go about that?
Fedora KDE refresh rate seems broken?
I’ve been running Wayland with my NVIDIA GTX 1660 with the Nouveau drivers, I have a 1440p 165hz monitor. Whenever I try to raise my refresh rate in settings above 75hz a giant black box appears at the top of the screen. This problem seems to persist on X11(or maybe I didn’t switch correctly). To me this is a very big issue as I’d like to take full advantage of my hardware, and it also simply makes the system as a whole feel sluggish. Is this a problem I can solve or am I just doomed?
Downloading NVIDIA drivers on Fedora KDE?
I asked this question before in a previous post but it seems that all the answers that were given were for Fedora Workstation(GNOME). Considering the rumors that GNOME might completely remove the X11 session I’d very much like to avoid switching(I want to have plenty of options). How would I go about downloading, installing, and potentially managing the proprietary NVIDIA drivers on Fedora KDE? I’ve searched for an answer to this question but never found a concrete answer.
If you responded to my questions then, Thank You.
Not if you don’t have encryption enabled, or don’t mind disabling encryption after the move. If you do care about such things, your setup is going to involve a few extra steps.
Try these steps: https://www.linuxcapable.com/how-to-install-nvidia-drivers-on-fedora-linux/
NVIDIA also has a download you can execute as an installer, Windows-style, but I don’t believe you’ll ever get any updates that way.
Depends on your definition of “best”. In Linux, you can put any directory on any filesystem on any drive. You can format your SATA SSD, boot an install disk (to make sure none of the files are in use), and copy over all of the contents in /home to your new SATA SSD. Then you can edit
/etc/fstab
and add an entry for /home, pointing at the partition you just put all the files at. Usually, you can find the file system UUID in the KDE partition manager (somewhere in the properties, I’m sure), and add a line like:UUID=02085c37-9cbf-4eb8-913c-e2370c2d3e8d /home ext4 defaults 0 0
where
02085c37-9cbf-4eb8-913c-e2370c2d3e8d
would be the UUID of your partition.If you want to enable encryption, this becomes harder, involving /etc/crypttab, possibly key files, and ensuring the right hooks for generating the initramfs are present.
You could use BTRFS (either spread across multiple disks or stored on LVM to work around BTRFS’ RAID code, which some people deem unstable) to set up quotas for users and directories. In your use case, I would consider using BTRFS for the root filesystem so you can use snapshots in case something ever dies, but I also wouldn’t bother reformatting the disk just for that as a beginner.