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Home » General » A Beginner’s FAQ to Ubuntu Boot and Installation Terms

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A Beginner’s FAQ to Ubuntu Boot and Installation Terms

Understanding the Boot and Installation Terms for Ubuntu

This concise guide walks you through the essential terms involved in the boot process and preparing your computer to load Ubuntu, from powering on to starting the operating system.


1. BIOS (Basic Input/Output System)

The firmware that initializes hardware when the computer starts. It checks for a bootable device like your USB or hard drive.

  • Relevance: Ensures the system is ready to load Ubuntu from your USB drive.
  • Common Interaction: Press a key like F2, F10, or Del to access BIOS and change boot order.

2. UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface)

A modern replacement for BIOS, offering better performance and more features. It supports larger drives and a graphical interface.

  • Relevance: UEFI allows secure booting and works with modern Ubuntu systems.

3. Bootloader

A small program that loads the operating system. For Ubuntu, the bootloader is GRUB.

  • Relevance: GRUB lets you select Ubuntu or other installed operating systems during startup.
  • Common Term: GRUB menu—the interface that appears on dual-boot setups.

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4. Live USB/ISO

A bootable USB drive or file (ISO image) containing Ubuntu’s installation files.

  • Relevance: Needed to install or try Ubuntu without installing it on your hard drive.
  • How to Create: Use tools like Balena Etcher to write the ISO to a USB drive.

5. Partition

A section of a hard drive reserved for specific data or operating systems.

  • Relevance: During installation, you’ll partition your drive to allocate space for Ubuntu.
  • Common Partitions for Ubuntu:
    • / (root): The main system files.
    • swap: For temporary memory management.
    • /home: Stores user data.

 


6. EXT4 File System

The default file system used by Ubuntu for storing files on the hard drive.

  • Relevance: Provides fast, reliable, and efficient storage for your Ubuntu installation.

7. Kernel

The core part of the Linux operating system that manages hardware and processes.

  • Relevance: The Ubuntu kernel boots after GRUB loads it, bridging the hardware and the OS.

8. Terminal

A command-line interface for interacting with Ubuntu.

  • Relevance: While not needed during installation, it’s a vital tool for managing Ubuntu post-installation.

9. Desktop Environment

The graphical user interface (GUI) you interact with in Ubuntu. The default for Ubuntu is GNOME.

  • Relevance: Provides the user-friendly experience after installation.

10. EFI Partition

A small partition required by UEFI systems to store bootloaders like GRUB.

  • Relevance: Automatically created during Ubuntu installation on UEFI systems.

11. Secure Boot

A UEFI feature that only allows signed OS bootloaders to run.

  • Relevance: Ubuntu is signed and supports secure boot, so no changes are usually needed.

12. Swap Space

Disk space used as an extension of RAM when the physical memory is full.

  • Relevance: Configured during installation to improve performance.

13. LTS (Long-Term Support)

A version of Ubuntu that receives updates and support for five years.

  • Relevance: Recommended for most users for stability and reliability.

14. GRUB Configurations

Customizations for GRUB to change boot order or add OS entries.

  • Relevance: Use when dual-booting Ubuntu and another OS.

15. Repository

Online servers hosting Ubuntu software and updates.

  • Relevance: After installation, you’ll use repositories to install and update applications.

16. Root User

The superuser account with full system control.

  • Relevance: Needed for administrative tasks, such as installing software or updating the system.

This guide should demystify the basic terms you’ll encounter during Ubuntu’s boot and installation. Let me know if you need more details on any of these!

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