I recently an install of Nobara Linux and there seems to be an issue during boot. Sometimes it fails to boot correctly and the screen looks glitchy with random noise and colors with no obvious way to move past it, forcing a manual shutdown via the power button (a couple times it seems to have failed complete and the system automatically booted in Windows 10). When this doesn’t happen, Nobara appears to boot normally and have no issues once I reach the login screen.
I only have a few weeks of experience with Linux with Linux Mint. I did not encounter any boot problems with Mint so I don't think there are any hardware issues. I suspect I must have made an error somewhere with the Nobara installation or with how I set up the partitions. I tried to follow with advice I found online, but maybe the info was incomplete or out of date.
I installed Nobara-39-Official-2024-01-24 and finished running all system and driver updates.
Nobara Partition setup:
• /boot/efi = 600 MB, FAT32, flags: boot & bios-grub
• /boot = 1 GB, EXT4
• / = 50 GB, EXT4
• / home = 110 GB, EXT4
• no mount (label: games) = remaining SSD space ~273GB, EXT4
The remaining portion of my 1TB SSD is dual boot Windows 10.
If anyone could diagnose this, it would be a great help.
[Think there was an error, so reposted the comment.]
I did some testing in Nobara and it seems like there are various things that just seem to work correctly out of the box. Most of which would not run properly on Linux Mint no matter what I tried when I was using in for ~3-4 weeks.
Some specifics:
Mostly issues with Bottles, default proton on Steam (proton-GE did seem to fix these), Goverlay, etc.I have decided to keep my current win10 install and just do a single Linux distro.
Here's an updated potential setup for Win10/Nobara dual boot.
NVMe SSD:
SATA SSD:
Question: Does anyone have any recommendations about how large the Nobara Linux partition (/ & /home) should be?
Since I do not plan to put every type of user data on it and will put all my games on the Data & Games partition (which will the largest amount of SSD space), I imagine that I could get away with a smaller than average / & /home partition here. Of course, I do want to be careful with this since running out of space on / & /home would be a massive headache.