CaffeineAddict
Well-Known Member
What the heck is "atomic" distro lola regular distribution and an Atomic distribution
Why do people even bother with things that need special care especially if it's something non standard.
What the heck is "atomic" distro lola regular distribution and an Atomic distribution
Atomic aka Immutable distributions, they're imaged based Linux distributions focused on a containerized workflows, but dual-booting with those doesn't seem to be very well supported as with the warnings that they have limitations when it comes to custom partitioning and dual-booting.What the heck is "atomic" distro lol
Why do people even bother with things that need special care especially if it's something non standard.
Do you mean you are trying to add the other distribution's kernel entry in the same GRUB config of Fedora? I don't do that. I have separate bootloaders for Fedora Atomic and Arch Linux, and on separate EFI partitions.Been doing a bit of searching and try getting a vm to dual-boot a regular and atomic distribution, but couldn't get it to work. Seems the recommended way to dual-boot a regular distribution and an Atomic distribution is to use your UEFI menu which one you want to boot, which would mean you need need a separate efi partition for your Atomic install. This also the Bazzite documentation recommends.
What is a "one-time boot menu"?? There seems to be so much confusion between us.So the easiest way to do that is just to use "one-time boot menu" each time and then select from there which one you want to boot. Not sure if "one-time boot menu" can be configure to always show up by default.
That's what I was testing with and from different posts and documentation I have read that's not going to work, but to have separate efi partitions and to have your uefi boot from there via "the one time boot menu".Do you mean you are trying to add the other distribution's kernel entry in the same GRUB config of Fedora? I don't do that. I have separate bootloaders for Fedora Atomic and Arch Linux, and on separate EFI partitions.
I'm recommending what I've seen others do and what the Bazzite documentation recommends, one time boot menu is when you press F10 or F11 and you choose where you want to boot from.What is a "one-time boot menu"?? There seems to be so much confusion between us.
If you had read my posts correctly, this is what I have been doing. In my UEFI boot menu I get a list of the identified boot loaders. I can choose to boot Fedora's GRUB, Arch's systemd-boot, Arch's EFI stub that I configured, or Windows. I do not need a single bootloader to boot everything.That's what I was testing with and from different posts and documentation I have read that's not going to work, but to have separate efi partitions and to have your uefi boot from there via "the one time boot menu".
I'm recommending what I've seen others do and what the Bazzite documentation recommends, one time boot menu is when you press F10 or F11 and you choose where you want to boot from.
https://www.asus.com/me-en/support/faq/1013017 -> Method1
So in short you you press a key you get an uefi menu and the select which partition you want to boot from.