This was I can wipe the drive it’s on and install a new OS without losing anything in /home/
Log in as root to avoid trying to make sure no files in
/home/
are being read/written to.Step 1: copy data to new drive. Mount new drive to
/mnt/
.cp -ra /home/* /mnt/
.-a
means that all permissions remain the same which will mean that your user can still read them. Check the man page for more details. This command will take a while. Use-v
to see progress. You should see a folder with your username appear.Step 2. Prepare
/home
for new drive. Move the files to a new folder. This is done to make sure you can still easily go back.mv /home/ /home-bak/
keep your old home dir safe in case a mistake was made.mkdir /home/
.Step 3. Mount your new drive. Mount your drive to
/home/
and check if you can login. If everything went correctly, you should be able to just login. Finally you need to update your/etc/fstab
to include this new drive. This will make sure your home drive mounts when you start your os. If everything is working, you can delete your home-bak as well.I dont like the MV home. 😅
My advice :
- login as root.
- rsync -av /home, on the new disk.
- fstab : comment the old home’s line, don’t delete, and copy it to change the identifier (path or uuid).
- noob tips, add a new file in the new home.
- login to check it is ok (with su - user), and check there is the new file.
You can now delete or keep it as a save.
the mv home is just renaming the folder so you can mount home in the same space. Rsync is probably better than cp but I didn’t want to suggest tools that op doesn’t have installed.
Oh ok I see why no use of rsync. Clever.
I’ve read your solution, OP, you can go. Good tuto written on mobile.
This is a rough guide written on mobile. its probably best if someone double check some of this stuff before op tries it.
If you have a root account that allows logging in in text mode (no X no Wayland, no GUI), you would do that instead. These instructions are for that case. The home of root is /root , so it would not be affected.
Mount the new drive in an emty dir, if it isn’t already.
Make sure the other drives file system supports everything /home does.
Set the exact same permissions as /home/ in the new drives top level directory.
Add a line to fstab defining the other drive to be mounted automatically as /home .
Move the contents of /home over to the other drive.
Umount the other drive.
Enter just: mount /home
This should work without errors and if you peek inside, you should see user dirs and it should show up if you enter just: mount
No reboot necessary, you could just log out, switch to the GUI login and log in as regular user. After your next boot you will find out if you edited your fstab correctly to auto mount it. If not just log in as root in text mode again and fix it.
- Many Linux installers can preserve
/home
when asked nicely. - (as root)
rsync -avz /home/youruser/ other-machine:/home/
- Many Linux installers can preserve
In what way? Like a home partition?
Home should just be a folder you can copy over in most cases.
If it’s a separate partition, most distros can just install to the other partitions without overwriting the home partition.SELinux rights can be a problem.
Unsure what exactly you want to do, but this might be of help https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Partitioning/Home/Moving