File Systems/fa - Manjaro
https://wiki.manjaro.org/index.php/File_Systems/faExt2 → Ext3 → Ext4. Ext4 is the default filesystem in Manjaro at the moment. It is the evolution of the most used Linux filesystems (Ext3, Ext2) and promises improved design, better performance, reliability, and features over its predecessors. If you are using Ext2 or Ext3, you can convert the partition to Ext4.
Fstab - Manjaro
https://wiki.manjaro.org/index.php/Fstabfstab usage. The /etc/fstab root-owned configuration file is used to define how disk partitions, various other block devices, or remote filesystems should be mounted into the filesystem.. Each filesystem is described in a separate line. These definitions will be converted into systemd mount units dynamically at boot, or when the configuration of the system manager is reloaded.
NTFS-3G - ArchWiki - Arch Linux
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NTFS-3GNote: The ntfs-3g package does not have internal FUSE support. Rebuild the package using ABS to enable FUSE support.. The full explanation is that "user" and "users" work via a setuid mount not dropping its setuid privilege so that the block device can be used without root. However, ntfs-3g has a hard-coded restriction in ntfs-3g that bails on setuid if an external libfuse is used.
UEFI - Install Guide - Manjaro
https://wiki.manjaro.org/index.php?title=UEFI_-_Install_GuideTo use the Graphical Installer select the Install Manjaro option from the Manjaro Welcome screen or from the desktop.. For the ESP (EFI system partition) which will store the EFI Grub binary, a 512mb partition of type fat32 can be created in the partitioning step, and mounted to /boot/efi. If you are dual booting then an EFI partition from a previous install can also be used.