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Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
If someone didn't move the final over to the "normal" download page from the Daily Build page, that's O.K. Just waiting 'til they fix their "oops". I still want to see if the installer refuses to work if the EFI partition id < 300MB, or 500MB, or 1GB or whatever other foolishness is being pushed
/boot/efi is the normal home for the EFI files, and the rest of the OS images/grub/etc. are in /boot.
The next brick house on the left
Intel i7 11th Gen | 16GB | 1TB | KDE Plasma 5.27.11| Kubuntu 24.04 | 6.8.0-31-generic
Neon's has the 300 size, and only has a line enabling the LUKS option in that file, so I do think that this is just the default or fallback set by Calamares' devs.
Neon's has the 300 size, and only has a line enabling the LUKS option in that file, so I do think that this is just the default or fallback set by Calamares' devs.
Thanks for the clarity and references. I'll be looking at that. Is manual setup still a thing? If so, then does the Calamares installer then over-ride the user's manual partitioning scheme?
Sorry for all the questions, but "inquiring minds ..." and all that.
The next brick house on the left
Intel i7 11th Gen | 16GB | 1TB | KDE Plasma 5.27.11| Kubuntu 24.04 | 6.8.0-31-generic
[…]
Is manual setup still a thing? If so, then does the Calamares installer then over-ride the user's manual partitioning scheme?
[…]
Don't apologise for questions.
Of course it is. There are hundreds of different use cases that require different partitioning schemes…
The manual partitioning in Calamares works pretty well. And it only over-rides your partition scheme if you tell it to.
Just be aware for example in set-ups with multiple ESPs or if you use the same swap partitions from different Linux systems (wrongly used ESPs, possibly changing UUIDs, etc.).
Thanks for the clarity and references. I'll be looking at that. Is manual setup still a thing? If so, then does the Calamares installer then over-ride the user's manual partitioning scheme?
Calamares is just fairly configurable, and it seems fairly easy overall. Good for disttros to change thins as needed to fit whatever needs and system configurations it might be using.
A side benny is that those who might want to change break something before beginning are able to easily screw things up tweak something. Neon used to have an incorrect/outdated space-cache setting for btrfs, and one fix was a quick edit before installing.
Manual installs of course are available.
Calamares is quite similar in layout and process to Ubiquity, so it will feel very familiar.
Schwarzer Kater I have downloaded your scripts for killing snaps and installing "traditional" FF and TBird. Is there a non-snap replacement for the firmware updater? Sorry if I missed that before
EDIT: NEVER MIND: I found it in your 30 March post Thank you again for doing this.
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