Hello, basically the title. It is one of the newer cards and it is fedora 40 the distro.

  • j4k3@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    No. You can use either a Fedora distro or regular default vanilla Ubuntu. Both of these package managers have a special shim keys that are signed by a 3rd party program from Microsoft.

    If you want to run anything else, you need to self sign your key for secure boot. Gentoo has killer documentation on how to do this. It doesn’t matter what distro you use. Secure Boot is outside of the Linux kernel. With Fedora, it is handled by their Anaconda system, (no relationship to the Python containers system by the same name).

    • wallmenis@lemmy.oneOP
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      1 month ago

      Looks interesting. A bit scary enrolling keys because i am scared of accidentaly deleting the default ones (unless i am being unreasonable)

      • typhoon@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        The procedure is much hassle free than it looks. Keeping the secure boot on enrolled is a good practice. I read recently that Fedora was approving the sign automatically to be part of the gnome-software. So things may become even easier soon.

      • StrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 month ago

        The last time I had secure boot enabled on any of my systems was several years ago, but yes. At that time you had to enroll the keys both on the initial install and every update. It was such a headache for limited benefits (for me) that I just started disabling secure boot whenever I was setting up a system.

        Things might have gotten easier, but I doubt it as he secure boot system is not really under the control of open source developers (for good reason) and the end user can really only choose whether it is enabled or disabled.