Dual Boot: Does Linux work with TPM enabled?

Of course it works. Following Microsoft 's announcements for the upcoming operating system Windows 11, I thought to check if the I have TPM, and if so, in which version.

The ways you can control your PC have been published by Dimitris here.

I followed the instructions in the partition with the . I have installed it 2019 Standard and I use it as a workstation, if I need a Windows environment. I find it safer and more stable than Windows 10.

During the test I noticed that the TPM module was not activated. Restart on Windows, F10, enter the BIOS and enable it (it was on the Security tab).

After logging in to Windows I had the following results:

27 6 2021 8 45 01
27 6 2021 8 48 28

Let's see now what happens to Linux.

Activating the TPM module will not cause you any problems, especially if the you are using is new version. I'm currently running Debian 11 Bullseye on a daily basis (yes it may still be in development and it's released as a beta version but it's more stable than stable Windows).

As you will see in the screenshot below, Debian sees the TPM module, (chip type, version) but there is a bug in the firmware.

screenshot 2021 06 27 21 28 11



I can live without it.

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windows 11, windows 11 greek, windows 11 tool, windows 11 requirements, iguru, tpm 2.0, tpm, tpm windows 11

Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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