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Partitioning a disk in Linux involves dividing a physical disk into logical segments (partitions) to organize data and allocate space for different purposes, such as installing operating systems, ...
Actually doing the partitioning work for any U/EFI-based Linux or Windows implementation isn’t much more difficult than writing partition tables for a standard MBR-based operating system. Using the ...
This repository provides a detailed guide and an automated Bash script for installing Arch Linux with full disk encryption (FDE) using a single encrypted partition, unlocked via a YubiKey with FIDO2 ...
In the beginning days of Unix and later Linux, disks were physically large, but very small in terms of storage capacity. A 300 megabyte disk in the mid-90’s was the size of a shoebox. Today, you can ...
As a Linux user, you may have encountered the term “swap partition” at one point or another. But what is a Linux swap partition, and why do you need one? In this article, we’ll cover everything you ...
Loading up virtual machines is an easy to accomplish task, but configuring them properly is an ongoing balancing act. It’s very likely that in a virtualized environment you will over/under provision ...
We store data in a variety of ways. On our hard disks, on optical discs (CDs and DVDs) and on removable devices such as USB sticks and external hard drives. In Windows, each would be given a drive ...
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