birger wrote:
With btrfs you create subvolumes within the same master volume.
The default is to have separate subvolumes for / and /home.
When doing a new install you can create a new / with a new subvolume
name within the same btrfs file system. rootfs-22 instead of just
root for example. That way you can mount your old / as a subdirectory
while moving over all your config to the new /, and you can keep
the same /home. When you are done, delete the old / subvolume
and you get your space back without any repartitioning.
look at the subvol=XXX in /etc/fstab
perfect, so I should be able to do this through Anaconda, correct?