> 
> Years ago I was very comfortable with a multi partition setup. But on starting
> an upgrade to OpenSuse 31.2 I have discovered that the machine needed a
> serious cleanout. So I tried to repartition into SWAP, / and /home. OpenSuse
> recommended btrfs for / and XFS for /home. I have used XFS for years so no
> problems.  I allocated 20Gb for SWAP and 50Gb for / and the balance to
> /home. The install has failed because it could not format the BTRFS partition.
> I expect that in the process the new partition table has been created, so
> maybe the historical mess is gone.  Can someone recommend a "standard"
> btrfs set up to save me some time, please?
> 

Depends what the machine is doing. Aside from wanting to split / and /home into 
different filesystems I can't really see any reason to have anything but /, 
/boot, and swap. Especially for a desktop. BTRFS quotas should keep the various 
subvolumes under control space-wise, if you have that concern.

I've noticed that Debian, in the "do everything for me" installation mode seems 
to put / before swap, which means if it's a VM and you later want to expand the 
disk, you'd need to shuffle things around a bit. For a VM though, I'd be 
running btrfs on the hypervisor and then run the VM on NFS, leaving the 
hypervisor to take the snapshots etc (depending on the VM workload - maybe NFS 
isn't so good for databases... I haven't checked recently).

James

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