I recently installed Fedora, but my system still boots directly into Windows 11 without showing the GRUB menu that allows me to select Fedora. What steps should I take to fix this issue?
3 Answers
It sounds like your Fedora installation might be on a different drive. To check this, restart your computer and access the BIOS. You may need to power down completely first since Fast Boot can skip the normal startup process. Once in the BIOS, ensure that the drive with Fedora is at the top of the boot order.
If you installed Fedora on the same drive but created a 100 GB partition for it, make sure that your boot entries are correct. Go into the boot menu during startup and select Fedora from there; if you see the GRUB menu after that, it indicates everything might be set up correctly, just not in the boot order.
There could be a UEFI issue at play here. Have you checked if your UEFI firmware is up to date? Also, look at the boot entries in your UEFI Setup to confirm that your new Fedora installation isn't missing; it might just be a matter of correcting the boot order.

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