I recently tried to install Qubes OS alongside an existing Windows installation. It turned out to be surprisingly difficult—way harder than my last attempt—likely due to a combination of my encrypted /boot setup and older hardware. Here are some notes from the process. Shrinking an NTFS Volume I needed to free up some space from a Windows NTFS volume. Normally, this just takes a few clicks in Disk Management. This time, however, Windows reported a "shrinkable volume" that was suspiciously small. Following this answer , I tried the standard fixes: Disabled hibernation ( powercfg /h off ) Disabled the pagefile Disabled system protection This increased the shrinkable volume a bit, but nowhere near the actual free space left on the partition. Digging into the Windows Application logs in Event Viewer, I finally found the culprit: The last unmovable file appears to be: \$Mft::$DATA . It turns out $Mft is a special block in NTFS that cannot be easily moved, ...
I've been running Qubes OS on Machine A alongside Windows for a while. My setup involved storing the unencrypted /boot partition and the LUKS header on an external USB drive. Recently, I planned to install Qubes on Machine B, also in a dual-boot configuration. However, the complexity jumped significantly: Machine B has Secure Boot enabled because BitLocker requires it. On previous installs, I grew tired of toggling Secure Boot in the BIOS every time I switched operating systems. I only have one USB drive. Managing separate /boot partitions for two different Qubes installations on a single thumb drive is messy. After some experimentation, I found a way to solve both problems. Sharing One USB Drive for Multiple Qubes Installations The solution is elegant: Don't store /boot on the USB drive. Instead, move /boot to the encrypted internal disk partition. The USB drive's only job is to unlock that partition and hand over control to the system. O...