On Mon, 2014-09-08 at 11:09 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote: > re: dual boot criteria for existing Linux + new Fedora install > > On Sep 7, 2014, at 6:52 AM, Michael Catanzaro <mcatanzaro@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > "The installer must be able to install into free space alongside > > existing GNU/Linux installations that are intended to be detected by the > > upstream software for detecting previously-installed operating systems, > > and install a bootloader which can boot into each previous > > installation." > > - Blocking on dual boot install failures, yes. Triple+ boot support is not realistic, although it benefits the more we do the right things with dual boot. > > { > > The installer must be able to install into free space alongside an existing GNU/Linux installation, install and configure a bootloader that will boot both systems, within the limitations of the upstream bootloader." > Within the limitations? [show] Purpose of this clause is to not require us to fix upstream bootloader bugs or design limitations. > > } Hi folks! So if I may, can we try and reset this thread to the criteria discussion? it'd be good to have any new criteria in place before we hit Beta TC1. So I believe we have under discussion the following criteria: 1. "The installer must be able to install into free space alongside an existing clean Windows installation and install a bootloader which can boot into both Windows and Fedora." This one is simply dropping the UEFI get-out clause from the current Final criterion. I am a big solid +1 to this. If no-one has any objections let's get this one implemented this week. 2. "The installer must be able to install into free space alongside an existing OS X installation, install and configure a bootloader that will boot Fedora; if the boot menu presents OS X entries, they should boot OS X." (so far as I could see on a quick skim back through the thread, this was the most recent version of the OS X proposal). I am +1 to this too, it seems reasonable. We could perhaps insert that the Fedora install process should not render the OS X install unbootable from the EFI boot manager? 3. The installer must be able to install into free space alongside an existing GNU/Linux installation, install and configure a bootloader that will boot both systems, within the limitations of the upstream bootloader." Within the limitations? [show] Purpose of this clause is to not require us to fix upstream bootloader bugs or design limitations. This is the complex one we're still struggling with. I think the above is possibly a little broad and could do with either limiting to stock-ish installs of 'commonly-used' or 'popular' distributions, or some more vaguely-worded wiggle room clause. I don't want to have to come up with some kind of criterion judo to justify us not slipping Final release three weeks to fix, I don't know, dual-boot with an xfs install of Fermi or something (no disrespect intended, Fermi users...) -- Adam Williamson Fedora QA Community Monkey IRC: adamw | Twitter: AdamW_Fedora | XMPP: adamw AT happyassassin . net http://www.happyassassin.net -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test