![]() I would seek such a setup only if you want to take advantage of the fact that you can actually boot that partition up in Boot Camp without virtualization. In general, it is not worth moving an existing setup to a Boot Camp partition only to get this (very marginal) speedup. The difference in perceived performance depends a lot on your particular use case. ![]() The reason for the speed difference is that in the first case, each read/write will go through your Windows guest file system (for example NTFS or ExFAT) and then directly to your block device - whereas in the second case, each read/write will go through first your Windows guest file system and then your macOS host file system (for example APFS or HFS+) - and finally to your block device. When comparing running a VM from the Boot Camp partition with running a VM from a macOS partition, the first will be ever so slightly faster!
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