Re: dual-boot installation instructions.

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On 9/13/2025 3:26 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 9/13/25 8:59 AM, home user via users wrote:
good morning,

(background)
I (finally!) have a new desktop on its way.  It's supposed to be totally blank; that is, it will have whatever firmware, bios, and other software the manufacturers of the parts put on those parts, but nothing else.  No windows, no other operating system.  The desktop will not connect to any other workstation, desktop, laptop, notebook, cell phone, server, LAN, or WAN.  It will have one ethernet connection to one phone modem, which will provide internet service.  The new desktop will not be an e-mail server or a web server.  It is for common "home use".  I will not be gaming on it. I will be the desktop's sole user.

The desktop will have two internal drives: one HDD for "user" data, one M.2(?) NVMe(?) drive for the operating systems and installed applications.  This desktop will not be "DIY"; it's bought from a local pc store.

I will want the new desktop to be dual-boot: Fedora Workstation plus one other Linux distro.  I will want Fedora to be the top choice in the grub menu.  If it matters, I'm leaning towards Ubuntu for that second operating system, but I have a couple reservations/hesitations about that.

(question)
I've groped around the web, especially the Fedora Docs web site ("https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/docs/";).  I've not found any instructions on how to install on a blank desktop, let alone how to do a dual-boot install.  What I found predates by years the new Anaconda and the new dnf.  Where are good, detailed instructions for doing a dual- boot install, Fedora + one other Linux distro, on a blank desktop?

As long as you don't use all the space when installing Fedora, you can install the other one.  The other distro should be able to share the EFI partition and create its own boot entry.  It's possible that the grun install will detect the other OS, but normally you will use the BIOS boot selector to pick which one to boot.

What is "grun"?

Does it matter which distro I install first?

By default, Fedora uses the "btrfs" file system, right?
By default, Ubuntu uses the "ext4" file system, right?
Is this going to cause any problems or affect the installs?

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