Installing Ubuntu on a different SSD but still having ability to switch OS SSDs quickly












0















So I want to switch to ubuntu. Already familiar with ubuntu and all, have it installed in a VM for about a month now.



I cannot stay without a computer for more than a few hours.



My current setup is 240GB ssd (windows) + 2tb hdd + 2tb hdd.
I am planning, to minimize downtime, I am going to buy a new 500GB ssd and install ubuntu on that. That way, if something goes wrong or i am unable to work on ubuntu (for some odd reason or some problem occurs), i would have the option to simply unplug the 500gb ssd, plug in my 240gb ssd and continue working on windows.



My question to you folks is the following: is switching os is as simple as unplug an ssd and plug in another ssd?



Would GRUB not allow me to do that? Do I have to change anything int he BIOS?



Thanks!










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  • If UEFI not quite as easy. UEFI forgets boot entries when a drive is unplugged. But if external drive, you can partition in advance with gpt & ESP partition. Grub will not install to it, but you can copy files to ESP on external drive. UEFI only boots external drives from /EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi file which we make a copy of shimx64.efi from install. UEFI/gpt partitioning in Advance: askubuntu.com/questions/743095/… & askubuntu.com/questions/913716/…

    – oldfred
    Jan 24 at 20:54
















0















So I want to switch to ubuntu. Already familiar with ubuntu and all, have it installed in a VM for about a month now.



I cannot stay without a computer for more than a few hours.



My current setup is 240GB ssd (windows) + 2tb hdd + 2tb hdd.
I am planning, to minimize downtime, I am going to buy a new 500GB ssd and install ubuntu on that. That way, if something goes wrong or i am unable to work on ubuntu (for some odd reason or some problem occurs), i would have the option to simply unplug the 500gb ssd, plug in my 240gb ssd and continue working on windows.



My question to you folks is the following: is switching os is as simple as unplug an ssd and plug in another ssd?



Would GRUB not allow me to do that? Do I have to change anything int he BIOS?



Thanks!










share|improve this question







New contributor




JumpingElephant is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • If UEFI not quite as easy. UEFI forgets boot entries when a drive is unplugged. But if external drive, you can partition in advance with gpt & ESP partition. Grub will not install to it, but you can copy files to ESP on external drive. UEFI only boots external drives from /EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi file which we make a copy of shimx64.efi from install. UEFI/gpt partitioning in Advance: askubuntu.com/questions/743095/… & askubuntu.com/questions/913716/…

    – oldfred
    Jan 24 at 20:54














0












0








0








So I want to switch to ubuntu. Already familiar with ubuntu and all, have it installed in a VM for about a month now.



I cannot stay without a computer for more than a few hours.



My current setup is 240GB ssd (windows) + 2tb hdd + 2tb hdd.
I am planning, to minimize downtime, I am going to buy a new 500GB ssd and install ubuntu on that. That way, if something goes wrong or i am unable to work on ubuntu (for some odd reason or some problem occurs), i would have the option to simply unplug the 500gb ssd, plug in my 240gb ssd and continue working on windows.



My question to you folks is the following: is switching os is as simple as unplug an ssd and plug in another ssd?



Would GRUB not allow me to do that? Do I have to change anything int he BIOS?



Thanks!










share|improve this question







New contributor




JumpingElephant is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












So I want to switch to ubuntu. Already familiar with ubuntu and all, have it installed in a VM for about a month now.



I cannot stay without a computer for more than a few hours.



My current setup is 240GB ssd (windows) + 2tb hdd + 2tb hdd.
I am planning, to minimize downtime, I am going to buy a new 500GB ssd and install ubuntu on that. That way, if something goes wrong or i am unable to work on ubuntu (for some odd reason or some problem occurs), i would have the option to simply unplug the 500gb ssd, plug in my 240gb ssd and continue working on windows.



My question to you folks is the following: is switching os is as simple as unplug an ssd and plug in another ssd?



Would GRUB not allow me to do that? Do I have to change anything int he BIOS?



Thanks!







dual-boot grub2 ssd






share|improve this question







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asked Jan 24 at 20:09









JumpingElephantJumpingElephant

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Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • If UEFI not quite as easy. UEFI forgets boot entries when a drive is unplugged. But if external drive, you can partition in advance with gpt & ESP partition. Grub will not install to it, but you can copy files to ESP on external drive. UEFI only boots external drives from /EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi file which we make a copy of shimx64.efi from install. UEFI/gpt partitioning in Advance: askubuntu.com/questions/743095/… & askubuntu.com/questions/913716/…

    – oldfred
    Jan 24 at 20:54



















  • If UEFI not quite as easy. UEFI forgets boot entries when a drive is unplugged. But if external drive, you can partition in advance with gpt & ESP partition. Grub will not install to it, but you can copy files to ESP on external drive. UEFI only boots external drives from /EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi file which we make a copy of shimx64.efi from install. UEFI/gpt partitioning in Advance: askubuntu.com/questions/743095/… & askubuntu.com/questions/913716/…

    – oldfred
    Jan 24 at 20:54

















If UEFI not quite as easy. UEFI forgets boot entries when a drive is unplugged. But if external drive, you can partition in advance with gpt & ESP partition. Grub will not install to it, but you can copy files to ESP on external drive. UEFI only boots external drives from /EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi file which we make a copy of shimx64.efi from install. UEFI/gpt partitioning in Advance: askubuntu.com/questions/743095/… & askubuntu.com/questions/913716/…

– oldfred
Jan 24 at 20:54





If UEFI not quite as easy. UEFI forgets boot entries when a drive is unplugged. But if external drive, you can partition in advance with gpt & ESP partition. Grub will not install to it, but you can copy files to ESP on external drive. UEFI only boots external drives from /EFI/Boot/bootx64.efi file which we make a copy of shimx64.efi from install. UEFI/gpt partitioning in Advance: askubuntu.com/questions/743095/… & askubuntu.com/questions/913716/…

– oldfred
Jan 24 at 20:54










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














Yes, it is very simple, I did that before in which I had ubuntu on an HDD and another one on an SSD, all what I used to do is just switching them (since I hadn't two places for two disks, I had just one).






share|improve this answer
























  • I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago











  • I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

    – Malek Adawi
    yesterday



















0














You are thinking it wrong. Linux and windows can coexist on the same SSD.
- Install/migrate windows to your new SSD and save it in case of dissaster, leaving ~half of unpartitioned for Linux.
- Then install linux on it, and allow grub to manage your boot.



It will find windows and configure grub to select which OS you want to boot. No need to move disks at all.
You can try this on a Virtualbox VM before commiting to bare metal.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














Yes, it is very simple, I did that before in which I had ubuntu on an HDD and another one on an SSD, all what I used to do is just switching them (since I hadn't two places for two disks, I had just one).






share|improve this answer
























  • I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago











  • I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

    – Malek Adawi
    yesterday
















0














Yes, it is very simple, I did that before in which I had ubuntu on an HDD and another one on an SSD, all what I used to do is just switching them (since I hadn't two places for two disks, I had just one).






share|improve this answer
























  • I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago











  • I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

    – Malek Adawi
    yesterday














0












0








0







Yes, it is very simple, I did that before in which I had ubuntu on an HDD and another one on an SSD, all what I used to do is just switching them (since I hadn't two places for two disks, I had just one).






share|improve this answer













Yes, it is very simple, I did that before in which I had ubuntu on an HDD and another one on an SSD, all what I used to do is just switching them (since I hadn't two places for two disks, I had just one).







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 24 at 20:36









Malek AdawiMalek Adawi

264




264













  • I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago











  • I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

    – Malek Adawi
    yesterday



















  • I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago











  • I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

    – Malek Adawi
    yesterday

















I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

– JumpingElephant
2 days ago





I had an old computer laying around that had windows installed, I also had an extra 120gb ssd and i tried installing ubuntu on it, but i remember once i switched to the other ssd (the one that had windows), i remember the pc not being able to boot (could not find boot driver or something - can't remember the exact error). That's what I am afraid of happening if I do it with my current work machine.

– JumpingElephant
2 days ago













I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

– Malek Adawi
yesterday





I think that you just didn't change some BIOS settings like boot priority or boot mode or secure boot is enabled while it shouldn't be. I'm sure that you can easily switch two disks with two operating systems, because each disk must contain its OS's boat loader.

– Malek Adawi
yesterday













0














You are thinking it wrong. Linux and windows can coexist on the same SSD.
- Install/migrate windows to your new SSD and save it in case of dissaster, leaving ~half of unpartitioned for Linux.
- Then install linux on it, and allow grub to manage your boot.



It will find windows and configure grub to select which OS you want to boot. No need to move disks at all.
You can try this on a Virtualbox VM before commiting to bare metal.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago
















0














You are thinking it wrong. Linux and windows can coexist on the same SSD.
- Install/migrate windows to your new SSD and save it in case of dissaster, leaving ~half of unpartitioned for Linux.
- Then install linux on it, and allow grub to manage your boot.



It will find windows and configure grub to select which OS you want to boot. No need to move disks at all.
You can try this on a Virtualbox VM before commiting to bare metal.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago














0












0








0







You are thinking it wrong. Linux and windows can coexist on the same SSD.
- Install/migrate windows to your new SSD and save it in case of dissaster, leaving ~half of unpartitioned for Linux.
- Then install linux on it, and allow grub to manage your boot.



It will find windows and configure grub to select which OS you want to boot. No need to move disks at all.
You can try this on a Virtualbox VM before commiting to bare metal.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










You are thinking it wrong. Linux and windows can coexist on the same SSD.
- Install/migrate windows to your new SSD and save it in case of dissaster, leaving ~half of unpartitioned for Linux.
- Then install linux on it, and allow grub to manage your boot.



It will find windows and configure grub to select which OS you want to boot. No need to move disks at all.
You can try this on a Virtualbox VM before commiting to bare metal.







share|improve this answer








New contributor




Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer






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answered Jan 24 at 21:01









DolapevichDolapevich

11




11




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New contributor





Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Dolapevich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago



















  • Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

    – JumpingElephant
    2 days ago

















Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

– JumpingElephant
2 days ago





Yeah regarding that, when I first installed windows on my machine, I tried to install ubuntu as dual boot, but the ubuntu installer would not recognize windows so I was not able to install ubuntu along side windows.

– JumpingElephant
2 days ago










JumpingElephant is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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