I will say that due to both installers defaulting to "@" and "@home" you must install one of them first, rename the subvolumes, then install the second.
openSUSE Leap had some partitioning requirements that Kubuntu doesn't have. Specifically a very large EF02 (BIOS BOOT for gpt disks) partition (8MB) that it required before installing. I've never needed my EF02 to be larger than 1007B (the amount you can fit in sectors 34 to 2047 ). I didn't try to pre-create this partition prior to the openSUSE install to see if it would proceed with the smaller size, but it might.
What I would probably do if this were my setup is let openSUSE install and configure the drive. Then boot to Kubuntu LIVE and mount the root btrfs file system and rename openSUSE's "@" and "@home" to something else. Then install Kubuntu onto the btrfs partition without reformatting. Do the edits and move Kubuntu to "@Kubuntu" and "@Kubuntu_home". Then move openSUSE back to "@" and "@home" and reboot. Then Kubuntu would be controlling grub for when I deleted openSUSE later
openSUSE Leap had some partitioning requirements that Kubuntu doesn't have. Specifically a very large EF02 (BIOS BOOT for gpt disks) partition (8MB) that it required before installing. I've never needed my EF02 to be larger than 1007B (the amount you can fit in sectors 34 to 2047 ). I didn't try to pre-create this partition prior to the openSUSE install to see if it would proceed with the smaller size, but it might.
What I would probably do if this were my setup is let openSUSE install and configure the drive. Then boot to Kubuntu LIVE and mount the root btrfs file system and rename openSUSE's "@" and "@home" to something else. Then install Kubuntu onto the btrfs partition without reformatting. Do the edits and move Kubuntu to "@Kubuntu" and "@Kubuntu_home". Then move openSUSE back to "@" and "@home" and reboot. Then Kubuntu would be controlling grub for when I deleted openSUSE later
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