Fedora 40 installer stuck at initramfs generation on dual boot setup
from Ezek@sopuli.xyz to linux@lemmy.ml on 23 Jul 2024 16:15
https://sopuli.xyz/post/15121804

I am trying to install Fedora KDE 40 on my HP laptop alobside windows 11 on a 40 GB partition. for some reason, installation works fine but gts stuck at ‘Generating initramfs’ i cant see any other issues and USB access is fine. what could be going wrong?

#linux

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zelifcam@lemmy.world on 23 Jul 2024 16:44 next collapse

No errors around ‘Generating initramfs’ ?

How long did you let it sit there?

40Gb partition

What filesystem? So just a single / partition?

Have you tried it multiple times?

installation works fine

So the installation completes? And you’re trying to boot into the new OS? I don’t understand when you’re seeing this error if the installation completes?

Ezek@sopuli.xyz on 23 Jul 2024 16:48 collapse

i let it sit there for about 25 mins how long should it normally be taking? isnt initramfs a vey basic component this is strange since everything else takes only up to 5mins to install

and by the installation is fine I mean up until that step everything has been working fine. installing software/bootloadet

gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works on 23 Jul 2024 16:50 next collapse

Did you install from a ventoy USB? I had a weird issue recently where a system was doing something very similar - not a dual boot, just something I was slapping proxmox on. It appeared that a newer version of the ISO was doing something weird with the disk imaging when it tried to copy stuff from ventoy - I saw “ventoy” in some of the paths in the verbose logs on the post-install reboot. Slapping the install image on a bare USB drive and installing from there resolved the issue.

Tangentially: if you’re doing this as an evaluation… from personal experience, I’d just make a full backup of your system disk, then blast it and just make it a dedicated Linux box. Using the dual-boot crutch, in my experience, often devolves into basically just forgetting you even have the Linux partition because you rarely use it, and then a windows update will break grub or something like that, and you just don’t bother fixing it. Doing an actual OS migration is more work, sure, but it also forces you to actually use linux, and solving problems in that context is going to teach you a lot more than bailing out and rebooting into your windows part.

Also also: since you’re already down with KDE, check out kinoite (atomic F40 KDE). Atomic distros are awesome :)

Ezek@sopuli.xyz on 23 Jul 2024 17:46 next collapse

The dual boot is simply there because I still on occasion need to use windows-only software. Otherwise, everything’ll be on Fedora. All I need to do is migrate some of my projects

gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works on 23 Jul 2024 17:58 collapse

And WINE and friends definitely won’t cut the mustard for you? Might be worth checking out, at least.

bilb@lem.monster on 23 Jul 2024 22:32 collapse

Also also: since you’re already down with KDE, check out kinoite (atomic F40 KDE). Atomic distros are awesome :)

And check out Aurora! It’s basically Kinoite with a lot of nice tweaks and inclusions. Aurora-dx is especially nice if you do dev stuff. I’ve been really happy with it.

gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works on 24 Jul 2024 01:48 collapse

Oooooo. I had not heard of that. Sounds nifty. Thanks for the tip!

slowbyrne@beehaw.org on 23 Jul 2024 16:54 next collapse

I’ve had installations hang a long while before eventually succeeding. I would also ensure Windows has hibernate turned off and quick boot disabled.

Ezek@sopuli.xyz on 23 Jul 2024 17:43 collapse

UPDATE: issue fixed. My USB drive was probably an older format since after trying again unsuccessfully, I plugged it into another USB port which must be a backwards compatible port sonce after that it worked smoothly

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 24 Jul 2024 02:02 collapse

It probably dropped down to usb 1 speeds. It would boot eventually but it would take an hour