Catalina and whether to Partition or create Volumes on a 4TB SSD: What to do?
I mistakenly asked this question in the incorrect community, so please pardon the reposting.
I've seen the question asked before and read all of the responses, but none of the responses seem to address this issue.
For many years I have partitioned all of the drives in every computer I have owned. I decided to do this to protect all the data on my computers from applications like Adobe Photoshop. Photoshop went crazy one day and overwrote key system software when the assigned scratch area was full, however since I had partitioned my drive not one bit of data was lost on any of the partitions. Every client design project was protected; all my various media files were in tact, my iTunes, Photos & iPhoto libraries which were redirected to a partition were in perfect condition and email that I had directed to a non-system partition was all saved from corruption and loss.
The startup partition was mostly toast, and only some files were recoverable.
So, the question is this:
Will creating VOLUMES on a 4TB SSD provide the same protection that isolating files on a partition would provide on the 4TB SSD and is partitioning on a SSD as protective as on a mechanical drive that is partitioned, if the operating system or the boot volume was hopelessly corrupted.
Of course the question is exclusive of a situation in which either the entire SSD or mechanical drive were to have a massive catastrophic failure.
On more than one occasion, I've had Adobe applications wreck havoc on my boot/system partition, but repeatedly the data stored on the other partitions was unaffected, and only the boot/system partition needed rebuilding. While it is always a pain to restore a corrupted drive, having the partition protected data made the task much easier on the several occasions when I had to rebuild a corrupted boot/system partition.
MacBook Pro with Touch Bar