On Wed, 2024-08-07 at 01:50 +0200, David Uhden Collado wrote: > > > Now I understand the rationale. It might be beneficial for the > installer > to offer multiple templates when selecting the automatic partitioning > option. These templates could cater to various common use cases, > making > the process more convenient and often eliminating the need for manual > disk partitioning. >
The difficult problem is that there is no good definition of "common use cases". I'm sure that the problems I use my computers to solve are different than yours. The default way of setting up the partitions assumes that you have done your homework. For example, the installer gives you the option to manually partition or manually adjust after an auto partition layout. If you don't know what you want then just manually create a root and swap and have fun! But when you do so then you also lose some of the extra protections (nodev, wxallowed, nosuid, etc) that the auto partitioning sets up by default.