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I've formatted Windows 10 from my dual drive notebook (128GB SSD + 1TB HDD) and installed Ubuntu., but I don't know exactly if I've only used my HDD while partitioning and left the SSD out. And also, why is some of it unallocated. Should I format and partition again? I find it quite hard to do it, and guarantee it will use both the SSD and the HDD. This is how it looks like:

HDD
/dev/sda    931.51 GB
Partition   Locked  Filesys MountPt     Size    Used        Unused      Flags
/dev/sda1   Y   fat32   /boot/efi   487 MB      7.05 MB     479.95 MB   boot,esp
/dev/sda2   Y   ext4    /            38.15 GB   6.93 GB     31.22 GB    
/dev/sda3   Y   linux-swap           15.26 GB   0           15.26 GB
/dev/sda4       unallocated         877.83 GB

SSD
/dev/sdb    119.24 GB
/dev/sdb1   Y   ext4    /home       119.24 GB   3.08 GB     116.16 GB

My initial intention was to use the SSD for Ubuntu and the HDD for files. (I'm not sure what would be best too)

I've used this tutorial to partition the drives.

K7AAY
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Mari
  • 3

1 Answers1

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You wrote... "'I've formatted Windows 10 from my (dual drive) notebook" (hybrid being a term with a very different meaning) but what I see is you've removed Windows 10, made the HDD your boot and OS drive with a dedicated swap partition, and made the SSD /home.

If you reinstall Ubuntu, first erase both drives. Boot from your LiveUSB using gparted, unlock all drives showing a key icon in the second column, click the checkmark in the icon bar, and close gparted.

Run installation again, and install to the SSD only. When you choose manual partitioning, it gives you the choice of which device to install to, which should be /dev/sdb .

With Ubuntu 18.04 and later, you do not need a dedicated swap partition unless you intend to use Hibernation (and that's easy to change later if you do find a need for Hibernation).

Once installation is complete, then reboot so you're running from the SSD without the LiveUSB attached. Then, use gparted again, and re-partition and reformat the HDD into one large ext4 partition.

You can then use the HDD for media storage in addition to what's in the SSD.

K7AAY
  • 17,705