I recently installed debian 12 using debian-12.2.0-arm64-netinst.iso. It is the only OS installed and I used the whole 500GB disk.
I selected something like guided partitioning with separate /home/
using LVM and encryption. Now that I am using my system a bit, I realize that I don’t think it ever asked me how big to make the /
partition and it is very small. Only 27GB.
Will this be a problem?
Or, is the LVM going to allow the partition to be resized or otherwise take up as much of the space as it requires?
# lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
sda 8:0 0 476.9G 0 disk
├─sda1 8:1 0 512M 0 part /boot/efi
├─sda2 8:2 0 488M 0 part /boot
└─sda3 8:3 0 476G 0 part
└─sda3_crypt 253:0 0 475.9G 0 crypt
├─mycomputer--vg-root 253:1 0 27.9G 0 lvm /
├─mycomputer--vg-swap_1 253:2 0 976M 0 lvm [SWAP]
└─mycomputer--vg-home 253:3 0 447G 0 lvm /home
I tried booting into a live usb to resize the partition using gparted
but I couldn’t seem to do so.
If I need to reinstall and change something I’d rather do it now than later.
This is my one gripe with Debian’s installer. I don’t mind it setting defaults like 27G for / and 10G or whatever for /tmp. But I don’t like that you can’t stop it from allocating the entire volume. If it left a few hundred GB unallocated, then it would be trivial to expand whichever one you realize you need to expand later on.
As it is, if you want to give more room to one partition or another later on, you have to shrink /home first. If /home is ext4, that’s inconvenient. If it’s XFS, though, it’s a nightmare.