Thus, extracting Windows installation ISO content to different partition without modification would be a better solution. Extracting all contents from different Windows installation ISOs to different folders in same partition is theoretically possible, however extra manipulation on each boot.wim are needed to make sure correct install.wim can always be found (Windows installation ISOs have very much similar file tree hierarchy from DVD_ROM root). Boot Windows ISO directly via GRUB2 is not always successful in both BIOS and UEFI (details later), so putting all Windows ISOs in same partition can’t be an option. Most Linux Distro ISO can be booted directly via GRUB2, so putting all these ISOs in same partition won’t be a problem. Multiple primary partition support is “better to have” instead of “must have”. Partition Table:Īs long as there’s an ESP (EFI system partition), both MBR and GPT disk can be used. GRUB2 can support both BIOS and UEFI systems (different boot sequence) so there’s no gap in bootloader choosing.
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