Just want to ask some questions as I am considering installing linux as dual boot on a single drive in its own partition
- what partitions do linux distros need to function ?
- what linux distros support secure boot with nvidia drivers ?
- is it bad idea to install linux on a single drive in its own partition ?
- what precautions should I take other than backing up my hard drive before doing dual boot ?
- I have heard some linux distros like linux mint and ubuntu have a habit of touching other efi partitions when being told not to, are there any other distros that do that ?
- Expanding on the previous question qre there any distros that touch or corruption windows partitions ?
- How can I ensure my dual boot linux install won’t touch my windows partition at all if I install dual boot linux ?
- Is there anything else I should be aware about ?
If this is your first time installing Linux, keep it simple.
what partitions do linux distros need to function ?
One is enough for Linux alone. Two if you want to dual boot (one for Windows, another for Linux). Everything else is optional.
what linux distros support secure boot with nvidia drivers ?
I don’t have a full list, but I’m reasonably certain that Linux Mint supports secure boot UEFI, and I’m sure that it supports NVidia drivers.
Note that you can disable secure boot to run other distros if necessary/desired.
is it bad idea to install linux on a single drive in its own partition ?
As in, single boot? It’s only a bad idea if you need Windows for some reason. But then you could run Windows from a virtual machine, as the other poster said.
I have heard some linux distros like linux mint and ubuntu have a habit of touching other efi partitions when being told not to, are there any other distros that do that ?
I’m really unsure if this actually happens; I’ve dual booted Windows with Ubuntu for years, and to my knowledge Ubuntu never touched the Windows partition without my permission.
Plus if this happened I bet that a lot of people would be raging.
Is there anything else I should be aware about ?
Don’t look for exact copies of the software that you typically use with Windows. Instead, look for software that fills the same purpose.
When possible, let your distribution install software for you, through its own package manager. Downloading and running random executables from the internet is a last resort.
The Arch wiki is a godsend even if you don’t use Arch. (I don’t use Arch BTW.)
When asking people for help, make sure to include which distro you’re running, and which version.