Hello, I have successfully installed Linux Mint 22.1 alongside macOS Ventura 13.7.6 on a MacBookPro14,1 (2017 MacBook Pro):
I would like to write an installation guide and add it to https://linuxmint-installation-guide.readthedocs.io by PR'ing it to https://github.com/linuxmint/doc-installation-guide.
If you have an Intel-based MacBook or Mac, I would like to request your help editing or testing the installation guide. It roughly goes as follows:
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Following https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA:Testcase_dualboot_with_macOS, use Disk Utility on macOS to add a partition to install Linux Mint in.
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Boot into the installation medium. You should see the following screen at some point. Select "Something else".
- You should see the newly created partition at the bottom. Select it and click "Change...".
- Select "Use as: Ext4" and the mount point as "/".
- Select the EFI partition for the boot loader installation:
- Click "Install now".
@Utone All I need is for people to test this guide and iron out anything that isn't clear enough, with the eventual goal of adding it to the official Multi-boot Linux Mint guide by PR'ing it to the docs repo. Unfortunately, it currently only covers installing alongside Windows.
And I'm not sure what driver support you're referring to.
I noticed you're running Sequoia, what model are you using? Since I can't run Sequoia on my 2017 MacBook Pro (unless I use a workaround), I'm assuming your model is 2018+, which have a T2 chip. I'm surprised the linked video guide didn't mention t2linux. Maybe it isn't needed for Ubuntu, not sure.
If the official Linux Mint ISO did not work, you might need to use the T2 Mint ISO.
The main difference I noticed in the linked video guide is that the the new partition in Disk Utility was set to "MS-DOS (FAT)" instead of "Mac OS Extended". I don't know if the Linux Mint installer can handle MS-DOS (FAT), haven't tried. But I'm assuming either should be fine. You'll know when you try to change the partition format.