I am using it for gaming on windows. I will dual boot with a different os on seperate drives. For linux, i want something stable that won't crash on wayland.
wallmenis
I used to do this while using windows 10 and arch on my laptop. Didnt have any issues. It is just if windows 11 might have an issue. Afaik from the above, my guess is that it just disables the checks whilst disabling secure boot.
Looks interesting. A bit scary enrolling keys because i am scared of accidentaly deleting the default ones (unless i am being unreasonable)
To be more clear, the swap of the oses (not swap as in the swap partition) will be done from bios by changing the boot drive/efi executable and toggling secure boot accordingly. Do you think this will work?
I am asking because I am looking to dual-boot with windows 11 which requires secure-boot afaik. I could disable it whilst switching (each os will be in it's own drive with the corresponding bootloader) so any os will be on a different drive.
I am mentioning the NVIDIA drivers. That is because there are new kernel modules that are open source. Maybe kernel signage is not needed with those ones. That is why I am asking.
By not necessarily, do you mean that I need to enroll keys?
Are the new kernel modules planned to be included in the kernel and if so, will that mean there will be secure boot support?
Man... Locked-in syndrome scares the shit out of me...
Just read a few at a time...
Nothing matters (so do nothing because there is no reason to do something)
Nothing matters (so do anything because why not!?)
It should be safe, although for the future, I'd recommend installing the os to a completely separate drive and changing boot device by uefi.