Installation on Thinkpad
Re: Installation on Thinkpad
If you're planning to install MX on used/refurbished Thinkpad(s), I would suggest you replace the disk with a new one. Everything is just much easier then :)
- FullScale4Me
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Re: Installation on Thinkpad
The MX User Manual is available online. Section 2 covers Installation. The 'How-To' of doing a standard installation begins in section 2.5.1 titled 'Detailed installation steps'.
https://www.mxlinux.org/manuals PDF in multiple languages.
https://www.mxlinux.org/manuals PDF in multiple languages.
Michael O'Toole
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Dell OptiPlex 7050 i7-7700, MX Linux 23 Xfce & Win 11 Pro
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MX Linux facebook group moderator
Dell OptiPlex 7050 i7-7700, MX Linux 23 Xfce & Win 11 Pro
HP Pavilion P2-1394 i3-2120T, MX Linux 23 Xfce & Win 10 Home
Dell Inspiron N7010 Intel Core i5 M 460, MX Linux 23 Xfce & KDE, Win 10
- chrispop99
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Re: Installation on Thinkpad
Thanks MS - what a faff!
Chris
MX Facebook Group Administrator.
Home-built desktop - Core i5 9400, 970 EVO Plus, 8GB
DELL XPS 15
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Home-built desktop - Core i5 9400, 970 EVO Plus, 8GB
DELL XPS 15
Lots of test machines
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Re: Installation on Thinkpad
The OP said they want to install Linux as the only operating system on the machine, want to install directly out of the box, and don't wish to use Windows in any way. In cases like this - given that you are able to boot into your installation media - you will not need to boot into Windows to disable Fast Startup first. Just make the installer use the whole disk for Linux, and allow it to format it (to the recommended ext4).
I have tested this on multiple systems, and have installed MX Linux on three personal modern Thinkpads. One of them came with a Windows 10 installation, two of them had Windows 11, one Win11 installation even in the default state from Lenovo. In each case, I did not change anything inside Windows prior to installation, as the end result I was after was what the OP is asking, too; I used the whole disk for the Linux installation, formatted to ext4. The most recent one was a Ryzen 5 Pro system this summer. Again, the Fast Startup setting in Windows will not interfere if literally doing what the OP is wanting to do.
Re: Installation on Thinkpad
@Nokkaelaein wrote:
That's wrong. With the advent of Win 10, the bios control "Quck Start" became the Windows feature "Fast Start Up" and the only way to disable it is within Windows 10 or 11.In cases like this, you will not need to boot into Windows to disable Fast Startup. Just make the installer use the whole disk for Linux, and allow it to format it (to the recommended ext4).
HP 15; ryzen 3 5300U APU; 500 Gb SSD; 8GB ram
HP 17; ryzen 3 3200; 500 GB SSD; 12 GB ram
Idea Center 3; 12 gen i5; 256 GB ssd;
In Linux, newer isn't always better. The best solution is the one that works.
HP 17; ryzen 3 3200; 500 GB SSD; 12 GB ram
Idea Center 3; 12 gen i5; 256 GB ssd;
In Linux, newer isn't always better. The best solution is the one that works.
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Re: Installation on Thinkpad
Please link a respectable and verifiable source that states you need to disable this in Windows before installing Linux if you are not installing a dual-boot system and not interested in using the existing Windows partition(s) - and instead, using the drive from scratch, creating and formatting ext4 partition(s) on the device.
Also, I repeat, I have literally done this on three modern Thinkpads, one of them having Windows 11 in factory state from Lenovo (just this summer), and turned nothing off in Windows, as I installed Linux as the sole operating system on the machine, formatting to ext4.
Re: Installation on Thinkpad
Be that as it may, Fast Start Up is a hidden bios switch whose control has been ceded to Microsoft, but it remains a bios switch. As such it resides in the bios, a location separate from the HDD or SSD. It will remain in play even in situations where an SSD or HDD has been replaced.Nokkaelaein wrote: ↑Wed Sep 04, 2024 10:37 amPlease link a respectable and verifiable source that states you need to disable this in Windows before installing Linux if you are not installing a dual-boot system and not interested in using the existing Windows partition(s) - and instead, using the drive from scratch, creating and formatting ext4 partition(s) on the device.
Also, I repeat, I have literally done this on three modern Thinkpads, one of them having Windows 11 in factory state from Lenovo (just this summer), and turned nothing off in Windows, as I installed Linux as the sole operating system on the machine, formatting to ext4.
As to your argument, Thinkpads may be different, but on the HP, Dell, Ideapads and MSI machines that I have worked on since the introduction of Win 10 it has been necessary to disable Fast Start Up prior to installing Linux.
HP 15; ryzen 3 5300U APU; 500 Gb SSD; 8GB ram
HP 17; ryzen 3 3200; 500 GB SSD; 12 GB ram
Idea Center 3; 12 gen i5; 256 GB ssd;
In Linux, newer isn't always better. The best solution is the one that works.
HP 17; ryzen 3 3200; 500 GB SSD; 12 GB ram
Idea Center 3; 12 gen i5; 256 GB ssd;
In Linux, newer isn't always better. The best solution is the one that works.
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Re: Installation on Thinkpad
Your above "That's wrong" is not manufacturer specific. This is a well-defined claim, about installing by creating the partition(s) from scratch, to which you replied it is wrong. Again, please link a respectable and verifiable source that states you need to disable this in Windows before installing Linux, if you are not installing a dual-boot system, and not interested in using the existing Windows partition(s) - and instead, use the drive from scratch, creating and formatting ext4 partition(s) on the device. Otherwise this is just a pointless back and forth from this point onwards.
(I did a search just now, and find no such source stressing the need to do this. Instead, I can find case examples from people who, for example, forgot to disable this in Windows, on non-Thinkpad systems also, and then were stuck with a read-only Windows partition - but then decided to install Linux from scratch as the sole operating system by completely reformatting to ext4. To reiterate once more, I have installed from scratch multiple times, and have never disabled this in Windows 10/11 prior, and have never seen an official source mentioning this being necessary when installing Linux in this manner.)
Re: Installation on Thinkpad
@Nokkaelaein You may not have hit this in Thinkpads yet, but in Lenovo's and HP's newer models... it is most definitely "a thing" and has been for several years.
https://www.elevenforum.com/t/enable-or ... s-11.4922/
https://www.cgdirector.com/what-is-fast-boot-in-bios/
https://itigic.com/fast-boot-setting-in ... ot-faster/
and a search for "fast boot bios" will lead you to MANY known links.
Note the "initialization of a minimal set of devices"Fast Boot is a feature in UEFI/BIOS that reduces your computer boot time with initialization of a minimal set of devices required to launch active boot option.
https://www.elevenforum.com/t/enable-or ... s-11.4922/
https://www.cgdirector.com/what-is-fast-boot-in-bios/
https://itigic.com/fast-boot-setting-in ... ot-faster/
and a search for "fast boot bios" will lead you to MANY known links.
*QSI = Quick System Info from menu (Copy for Forum)
*MXPI = MX Package Installer
*Please check the solved checkbox on the post that solved it.
*Linux -This is the way!
*MXPI = MX Package Installer
*Please check the solved checkbox on the post that solved it.
*Linux -This is the way!
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Re: Installation on Thinkpad
This is different. This is the Fast Boot functionality of the UEFI/BIOS. Note how the instructions you link describe the settings in the actual BIOS/UEFI setting screen of the computer, the first step literally being "Boot to UEFI BIOS firmware settings."CharlesV wrote: ↑Wed Sep 04, 2024 12:57 pm @Nokkaelaein You may not have hit this in Thinkpads yet, but in Lenovo's and HP's newer models... it is most definitely "a thing" and has been for several years.
Note the "initialization of a minimal set of devices"Fast Boot is a feature in UEFI/BIOS that reduces your computer boot time with initialization of a minimal set of devices required to launch active boot option.
https://www.elevenforum.com/t/enable-or ... s-11.4922/
https://www.cgdirector.com/what-is-fast-boot-in-bios/
https://itigic.com/fast-boot-setting-in ... ot-faster/
and a search for "fast boot bios" will lead you to MANY known links.
In other words, this is accessed from booting into the settings screen (accessed by a specific keypress during the bootup process), not within Windows. Again, Fast Boot is different from the Fast Startup feature in Windows, and what j2mcgreg is talking about is the latter.