On Mon, Mar 03, 2014 at 11:19:29AM -0700, Chris Murphy wrote: > > On Mar 3, 2014, at 10:42 AM, Miloslav Trmač <mitr@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > 2014-02-22 3:08 GMT+01:00 Chris Murphy <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > > On Feb 21, 2014, at 2:38 PM, John.Florian@xxxxxxxx wrote: > > The necessary context to add here is that both OS X and Windows have much better _post-install_ layout choices. > > I don't want to get ride of Anaconda's encryption options in Automatic or Manual partitioning UIs. > > I do want to get rid of ext2, ext3, vfat, and certainly RAID 4, in even the Manual Partitioning UI. And I question RAID 5/6 for rootfs. I could go along with getting rid of ext2, ext3, vfat, and RAID 4. I think RAID 5/6 are still too common to eliminate them. > > Both can convert a non-encrypted filesystem to encrypted post-installation, online, without significant downtime. > > Yes. At least Apple's is a live conversion (bi-directional) that permits rebooting, shutdown and sleep. > > > Re: LVM, IIRC OS X is setting up CoreStorage by default; Windows uses plain partitions, but can convert plain partitions into Dynamic Disks without backup&restore. > > By default Apple uses plain partitions for single drive computers; and Core Storage marries an SSD and HDD as a single LV for computers with both and they call this "Fusion Drive". When the user choose to encrypt, this is handled by Core Storage; the plain partition volume is converted to a Core Storage layout. > > I don't know how it works on Windows. There is a tool to convert ext4 to ext4-on-LVM in-place: https://github.com/g2p/blocks#readme -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct