What is the purpose of ubuntu-vg partiton?












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So, I'm new to partitioning and recently I installed ubuntu 13.10. I followed several online tutorials on how to create disk partitions effectively and all of them said that after ubuntu is done installing, I should have three partitions - home, swap and root. I installed GParted and saw that I only have two partitions - boot and ubuntu-vg, which is a part of an extended partition. My question is is ubuntu-vg a replacement for mentioned partitions? If I will want to, say, dual boot ubuntu with windows in sooner future, is it dangerous to resize it or mess with it in any other way? Thanks in advance :D










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    0















    So, I'm new to partitioning and recently I installed ubuntu 13.10. I followed several online tutorials on how to create disk partitions effectively and all of them said that after ubuntu is done installing, I should have three partitions - home, swap and root. I installed GParted and saw that I only have two partitions - boot and ubuntu-vg, which is a part of an extended partition. My question is is ubuntu-vg a replacement for mentioned partitions? If I will want to, say, dual boot ubuntu with windows in sooner future, is it dangerous to resize it or mess with it in any other way? Thanks in advance :D










    share|improve this question

























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      0








      So, I'm new to partitioning and recently I installed ubuntu 13.10. I followed several online tutorials on how to create disk partitions effectively and all of them said that after ubuntu is done installing, I should have three partitions - home, swap and root. I installed GParted and saw that I only have two partitions - boot and ubuntu-vg, which is a part of an extended partition. My question is is ubuntu-vg a replacement for mentioned partitions? If I will want to, say, dual boot ubuntu with windows in sooner future, is it dangerous to resize it or mess with it in any other way? Thanks in advance :D










      share|improve this question














      So, I'm new to partitioning and recently I installed ubuntu 13.10. I followed several online tutorials on how to create disk partitions effectively and all of them said that after ubuntu is done installing, I should have three partitions - home, swap and root. I installed GParted and saw that I only have two partitions - boot and ubuntu-vg, which is a part of an extended partition. My question is is ubuntu-vg a replacement for mentioned partitions? If I will want to, say, dual boot ubuntu with windows in sooner future, is it dangerous to resize it or mess with it in any other way? Thanks in advance :D







      partitioning gparted






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      asked Dec 9 '13 at 18:48









      AureusAureus

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          'vg' is a Volume Group, used in Logical Volume Management https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lvm and not needed for simple installations. However, there's nothing wrong with it, per se, and should you go dual-boot later, it will be no more problematic than standard partitioning.






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          • Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

            – Aureus
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:06











          • Yes, that's what's going on.

            – K7AAY
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:09












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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
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          active

          oldest

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          'vg' is a Volume Group, used in Logical Volume Management https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lvm and not needed for simple installations. However, there's nothing wrong with it, per se, and should you go dual-boot later, it will be no more problematic than standard partitioning.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

            – Aureus
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:06











          • Yes, that's what's going on.

            – K7AAY
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:09
















          2














          'vg' is a Volume Group, used in Logical Volume Management https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lvm and not needed for simple installations. However, there's nothing wrong with it, per se, and should you go dual-boot later, it will be no more problematic than standard partitioning.






          share|improve this answer
























          • Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

            – Aureus
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:06











          • Yes, that's what's going on.

            – K7AAY
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:09














          2












          2








          2







          'vg' is a Volume Group, used in Logical Volume Management https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lvm and not needed for simple installations. However, there's nothing wrong with it, per se, and should you go dual-boot later, it will be no more problematic than standard partitioning.






          share|improve this answer













          'vg' is a Volume Group, used in Logical Volume Management https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Lvm and not needed for simple installations. However, there's nothing wrong with it, per se, and should you go dual-boot later, it will be no more problematic than standard partitioning.







          share|improve this answer












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          answered Dec 9 '13 at 19:01









          K7AAYK7AAY

          4,02921744




          4,02921744













          • Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

            – Aureus
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:06











          • Yes, that's what's going on.

            – K7AAY
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:09



















          • Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

            – Aureus
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:06











          • Yes, that's what's going on.

            – K7AAY
            Dec 9 '13 at 19:09

















          Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

          – Aureus
          Dec 9 '13 at 19:06





          Ok, so the files that would usually be stored in root/home/swap are all in the -vg partition?

          – Aureus
          Dec 9 '13 at 19:06













          Yes, that's what's going on.

          – K7AAY
          Dec 9 '13 at 19:09





          Yes, that's what's going on.

          – K7AAY
          Dec 9 '13 at 19:09


















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