I am currently pre-planning. If it could be done, then I am going to go
about searching and purchasing necessary devices in order to do the task.
That's why I am asking in the first place. I have a usb device that I can
attach for testing now.

Currently I am just running from a live usb. Here is the output of df -h

Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev            1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /dev
tmpfs           384M  6.4M  378M   2% /run
/dev/sdb1       2.9G  2.9G     0 100% /run/live/medium
/dev/loop0      2.6G  2.6G     0 100% /run/live/rootfs/filesystem.squashfs
tmpfs           1.9G  1.8G   86M  96% /run/live/overlay
overlay         1.9G  1.8G   86M  96% /
tmpfs           1.9G  102M  1.8G   6% /dev/shm
tmpfs           5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
tmpfs           1.9G     0  1.9G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs           1.9G  436K  1.9G   1% /tmp
tmpfs           384M  5.8M  378M   2% /run/user/1000


Greg Wooledge <g...@wooledge.org>, 23 Şub 2021 Sal, 00:14 tarihinde şunu
yazdı:

> Semih Ozlem (semihozlemlinuxu...@gmail.com) wrote:
> > It is a starting point but the problem is really not with whether there
> is
> > enough space to download installation files, for they can be downloaded
> > remotely to some other disk. The problem is when installing from the
> > downloaded files, the system itself may give an error saying no disk
> space
> > left. The problem is when installing the file I presume some files are
> > written in linux directory usually I presume or guess in /bin/ or /sbin
> so
> > that the installed programs become usable. When an external disk is
> added,
> > it is writable and readable but its space does not become incorporated or
> > available to /bin /sbin or whatever directories in linux filesystem get
> > used... Is it possible to make some changes to filesystem hierarchy so
> that
> > the additional disk becomes available to the system?
>
> You decide where to mount the new partition(s) or logical volume(s).
>
> Start from the beginning, please.  Show us the output of "df -h" or
> something.  Also tell us how the computer is being used (personal
> desktop/laptop, server of some kind, etc.).  Tell us where the big
> files are, or the big collections of files.
>
> Tell us how big each disk is.
>
> From there, people may be able to give you concrete advice, like "make
> a 10 GB partition and mount it as /var", or "mount the entire second
> disk as /home".
>
>

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