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Update disks.md (EFI partition size) #644
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@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Alongside these options, we also provide the ability to use full-disk encryption | |||||
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If you are using a system with UEFI, you may need to create an EFI System Partition, also referred to as an ESP. This is not necessary if you are enabling Solus to install onto the entire disk. | ||||||
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To create an EFI System Partition, open up GParted and create a FAT32 partition that is 1 GB in size. Next, right-click on the partition and click Manage Flags. On the Manage Flags section, enable the `boot` and `esp` flags. | ||||||
To create an EFI System Partition, open up GParted and create a FAT32 partition that is 1 GiB (= 1024 MiB) in size. Next, right-click on the partition and click Manage Flags. On the Manage Flags section, enable the `boot` and `esp` flags. | ||||||
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**Notes:** | ||||||
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Please also add a non-breaking space before the new value
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In fact, maybe this should also use the same or a similar form as the table in System Requirements, for consistency's sake.
That is, something like 1.08 GB / 1 GiB
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So you would prefer
1.08 GB / 1 GiB / 1024 MiB
instead of1 GiB (= 1024 MiB)
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I'm not sure, to be honest. Someone with a sense of aesthetics please give your input! ^^
In any case this shouldn't be a hold-up for getting this clarification / error correction in, so as long as you add the non-breaking space and also add the same change to the System Requirements doc I think it should be fine to merge.
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This one is a tricky/interesting question.
disks.md
use 1024 MiB only, don't add any equivalents or conversions (GParted shows MiB in the UI, adding the GiB conversion is not really necessary or helpful)disks.md
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I agree with the first part. For the second part I'd still change it though, otherwise it's simply wrong. Perhaps only show the 1 GiB value there (because the exact GB value is ugly)
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There's another option: Removing that line from the requirements page, like this:
The rationale: Users reading the system requirements page only need to know if their system as a whole meets the requirements to run the operating systems. The users who need to know the exact size of the EFI partition are the ones who want to install everything manually, and that kind of users will eventually land in
disks.md