UEFI Secure Boot Linux Trust Chain: How Your Distro Gets Microsoft’s Permission to Boot
UEFI Secure Boot requires Microsoft’s signature for Linux to boot on most hardware. Here’s how the shim bootloader creates a trust chain…
UEFI Secure Boot requires Microsoft’s signature for Linux to boot on most hardware. Here’s how the shim bootloader creates a trust chain that actually works.
Linux needs Microsoft’s cryptographic blessing to boot on your own hardware. That sounds dystopian until you understand why it exists and how distributions solved it.
Let me walk you through the UEFI Secure Boot trust chain, explain why the shim bootloader exists, and show you exactly what breaks when you install that NVIDIA driver.


