![]() It can get complex, especially when you have other operating systems installed. If you want to have a different set of partitions, for example a separate home partition, or if you want to specify the file system type, size or location of partitions, then you will have to use manual partitioning. ![]() That goes beyond the scope of this tutorial.īy default the Linux Mint installer will create one root partition and one swap partition for you during installation. ![]() For one you'll need to create a EFI boot partition (format as FAT32, at least 200 MB, mount point /boot/efi and the boot flag must be set). For modern systems you almost certainly are using EFI boot (GPT + UEFI) and that requires additional steps. Read this first!!! This is an old tutorial and covers manual partitioning for older systems with legacy boot (MBR + BIOS).
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