Good day to you,
may you be good enough to walk me though for a Docket installation.
Kind Regards
Hello Travis,
Thank you for that technical tip again. It will help me on the long run.
By the way you mentioned of a "nice fedora flash disk" where I could boot from and look at the disk partitions and so on.
Does this refer to the link you sent me in relation to Fedora, or something else?
Kind Regards,
Denzil
@Denzil -
I have no idea where I referred to the "flash" disk, but I'm sure it was relation to Fedora Live and my Fedora Remix. I'm almost certain I gave you the link to my Github information, but I roll my own custom Fedora Remix. So it is essentially Fedora Workstation with a ton of added tools already pre-installed.
https://tmichett.github.io/Fedora_Remix/
I know I directed you directly to Fedora too. Both ISOs would be a live bootable USB disk that allows you to work with Linux without installing, but you also have the ability to mount partitions in the graphical environment. I also remember mentioning that you don't need to build your own and you could download mine. That Github page has a link to a GoogleDrive where I've uploaded various versions of my Fedora Reminx. The latest one is
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GBM2OzaIG4f33dDUomTs0t_J3zxiMfDO/view?usp=drive_link
Which is Fedora 42 with a bunch of preinstalled applications and utilities. This would require a 16GB/32GB USB flash drive to provide the best experience.
Good day to you Travis,
Thank you so much again. Indeed I have these links saved.
My utmost thanks for all your help!
Kind Regards
Denzil
Hello Travis,
I am reaching up to you again, while appreciating your previous help.
I have an old PC with a 1TB disk, and I am keen to install Redhat 8.10, Debian, and Ubantu.
In which order must I install these three flavous of Link, and what are the partition values for each, please.
Hello @Denzil
Installing multiple Linux distributions is very doable if you plan the order and partitions properly.
Install in this order:
1. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) 8.10
Choose Custom Partitioning
Create:
EFI: 512 MB -> /boot/efi (do NOT format later)
RHEL root: 200 GB -> /
Swap: 16–32 GB
2. Debian
Choose Manual Partitioning
Select:
Existing EFI partition -> mount at /boot/efi -> DO NOT FORMAT
Free space -> create:
Debian root: 200 GB -> /
3. Ubuntu
Select:
Existing EFI partition -> /boot/efi -> DO NOT FORMAT
Free space -> create:
Ubuntu root: 200 GB -> /
Red Hat
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