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Mason Hall2018-08-17 22:50:19
linux
Mason Hall, 2018-08-17 22:50:19

How to correctly install LINUX and WINDOWS on RAID and SSD?

Hello everyone, please tell me how to properly install Linux (most likely it will be either Ubuntu or Kali) and Windows?
There is a raid 0 of two 250 gig HDDs. It has Windows 10. I installed a 60 GB SSD for Linux. For some reason, the Windows bootloader crashes during installation. How to install Linux correctly so that everything is in order with Windows? Maybe first you need to put Linux on an SSD, and only then install Windows? I didn’t find much on the Internet about the raid and ssd. And I also didn’t really understand the loaders. If it costs Windows and Linux, then they should have one bootloader? So that when you start the PC, you can choose what exactly I need? But that's just the way it usually is when they are on different sections of the same disk, and not on a raid and a separate disk.
Many thanks in advance for any attempt to help me

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3 answer(s)
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moropsk, 2018-08-17
@moropsk

Raid 0 when the 1st disk fails, everything dies.
It is better to remake on Raid 1

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fdroid, 2018-08-17
@fdroid

Windows first, then Linux. Linux will install its own bootloader, Grub, which will ensure that the OS is selected at startup and booted correctly. But here the problem is that it may not recognize that there is a RAID0 with Windows and will simply perceive it as two separate disks. Again, how is RAID made? If this is a controller built into the motherboard, then there is a chance that Linux will recognize the array and the installed OS in order to correctly configure Grub. But if the RAID is made by means of Windows itself, then it is unlikely that the plan will turn out. If the controller is hardware (which I doubt very much), then options are possible. In any case, Linux is quietly placed next to Windows and allows it to be loaded correctly. Winda also demolishes everything that does not apply to it. Therefore, we put Windows first.

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Ilya bow, 2018-08-18
@8889996

there should be two bootloaders.
and there must be a transition between them. from at least one to the other.
And one of them should be the main one and it should be loaded first.
Most often, the Linux bootloader is used as the main one due to the simplicity of its configuration.
In what sense does your bootloader flies? files disappear? bcd etc.

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