Switching from Manjaro to EndeavorOS, is there a way to preserve my home directory?

WheatleyInc@lemmy.blahaj.zone to Linux@lemmy.ml – 51 points –

The title says it all, I'd like to switch my operating system and preserve most of my files. Any other info I should know before the move would be nice as well.

14

If you're frequently distro-hopping, I recommend using a seperate /home partition. I did that before I settled down, I can't begin to describe how convenient it was (especially if you use Flatpak).

To do this one could install the new distro on a new partition, boot to it, delete everything from the old installation except the hone directory, move your user to the base directory (/home/sorrybookbroke -> /sorrybookbroke) before editing your /etc/fstab and mounting the old partition to /home

This way, no external drive is needed like @Luci@lemmy.ca suggested. Of course, their suggestion is the easiest, but this is the one I personally chose.

Copy them to an external drive or another computer, copy them back after.

Chances are you're gonna wanna wipe the partition table on your switch over so I'd just copy them out then back in. No point over complicating things.

Yea, I was gonna say, have ya not heard of backups ? but this is better.

Just to add: some folders' files might need modifications in the new system, e.g. .config/

I'd recommend starting fresh. Make a new one but don't delete the old one. You can then copy over what you want without bringing over anything like dotfiles with bad settings.

WHY THERE ARE NOT.

Please have a partition for /home. In fact, you need partition for /usr, /var,.. too

Just remove every directory except for /home/. Then install the new OS without repartitioning.

I'd be careful, not every distro plays nice when you do this. In my experience at least.

If /home is on a different partition just don't format it and set it to mount on the same place and you should be good to go. If it's not make a backup, then create a partition just for it, install your new system, restore the backup, and next time you won't need a backup.