this post was submitted on 08 Feb 2026
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Not every Linux distribution supports Secure Boot, but almost all of them do. No need to toggle it depending on your boot target. Dual booting with secure boot works just fine.
With a bootloader signed using Microsoft keys, or a bootloader that needs a MOK to be set up to install third-party keys in the Secure Boot database?
I did the latter and it was a pretty annoying process that would scare away beginners—hence me saying a "workaround" was possible. I'm not using a common distro like Fedora or Ubuntu, though. Is setting it up less painful on those?
I'm using Fedora. Works out of the box. You need to add a MOK if you want to use custom kernel modules (or the current Nvidia drivers). But using the nouveau driver or just a standard installation of not using Nvidia hardware works flawlessly without MOK.
Im using Nvidia. The initial import of the MOK is a bit... strange or scary for non tech people, but afterwards, akmods makes it a breeze. You don't have to think about it. With Fedora 42, akmods regularly failed to build the driver's and I had to restart the build manually after a kernel upgrade, but since I upgraded to Fedora 43, it just works.