From another comment I made
A linux installer for windows that works just like a normal installer on windows. You download the
.exe
, double click it, it opens a wizard you can walk though, and by the end of the process, after it reboots, you’re in a linux distro.
How could something like this be implemented?
My idea:
Best case scenario where multiple data partitions exist and can accommodate the user data stored on C:/
+ there’s a swap partition -->
- download a linux iso
- deactivate swap
- replace swap partition with ISO contents
- modify contents to auto install linux with settings from wizard
- add boot entry to boot from old swap / modified ISO
- reboot
- install linux with a nice progress animation
- move user data from C:/ to other partition
- replace C:/ with linux
- install alternatives to programs found on windows (firefox for edge, gimp for paint, inkscape for …, libreoffice for MS office, etc.)
- move user data to
/home/$username
- configure DE with theme (gnome for macos look, kde with theme for windows look)
- other customisations
- reboot into linux
Dunno if this is feasible in the best case scenario.
The biggest barrier is writing lots of formatted data to disk without a pre-existing filesystem structure. Look at nixos-anywhere for an example; the first thing it does is ensure that it’s booted into Linux, because otherwise it can’t trust that the disks are laid out properly.
No sure what you mean. On which step is writing formatted data to disk happening?
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Steps 8, 9, and 11 assume that the filesystem is in a Linux-compatible state and Windows-compatible state simultaneously.
Oh, the indentation didn’t work. Those steps happen within the installer.
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