Hello everyone,
Thanks for your help! I managed to get the EFI partition to my liking by
installing Windows first, but before starting the install, I created my EFI
partition manually by running these commands:
1. diskpart
2. list disk
3. sel disk 0
4. create partition efi size=1000
5. format quic
Hi Vit
I presume you plan to have a single boot partition that will contain your
bootloader, kernel and initramfs. There are actually two kinds of boot
partitions that are commonly used together:
1. The EFI system partition (ESP) contains Linux and Windows's bootloaders.
It's formatted as FAT.
2.
On Wednesday, 3 April 2024 16:10:41 BST Vít Smolík wrote:
> Hello fellow Gentooers,
>
> I want to dual-boot Gentoo and M$ Windows on my computer, but windows only
> created a 100MB EFI partition. Is it necessary to resize it so my boot
> files will fit? If so - how to resize it so I don't mess up
Do you store your initramfs on the 100mb partition? Or do you stire it
somewhere else?
May the Force be with you,
Vít Smolík.
Dne st 3. 4. 2024 17:35 uživatel Alexis Praga
napsal:
> Hi Vit,
>
> I have a dual boot with a 100Mb EFI partition. It works fine, except there
> isn’t enough place for b
Hi Vit,
I have a dual boot with a 100Mb EFI partition. It works fine, except there
isn’t enough place for both old and new kernels for upgrading. So I moved the
old kernel from /boot into a safe directory before upgrading.
Maybe not the best strategy but I didn’t dare resize it.
Alexis
On Wed
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