Originally posted by Qqmike
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Say you want to give Disco Dingo a try. Alongside your normal Kubuntu, you set up a partition for it and install to that. Then, maybe you decide it's not ready yet, and delete it. Next reboot, you get
grub >
and a blinkiing cursor; the grub rescue prompt. When disco installed, it took control of grub, which then can't find itself, because you deleted it.
Or, maybe you install Linux Mint on another drive. You like it, and use it for some tasks, but keep Kubuntu for your main install. On Kubuntu, you customize grub for something, maybe a nice theme, or a kernel parameter to address a hardware issue. One day you log into Mint, it updates itself, and your nice theme is gone, or your hardware stops working.
I encountered problems like this early in my use of Kubuntu, and it never occurred to me to avoid the problems by disabling the mount of the EFI partition except in one install. There's still the problem that at the installation time the new install will take over the boot, but I know to go back to my main install and rerun grub-install there. I mentioned this point thinking someone like my old self would find out about this approach; there are others, like not using grub, or using UEFI features to control the boot.
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