On Tue, 04 Oct 2011 09:53:07 -0500
Dale <rdalek1...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Grant Edwards wrote:
> > On 2011-10-04, Neil Bothwick<n...@digimed.co.uk>  wrote:
> >> On Tue, 04 Oct 2011 04:49:56 -0500, Dale wrote:
> >>
> >>> Subject line says it pretty well.  Is grub2 stable, who uses it
> >>> and can you post your experience on the switching process?  Was
> >>> it difficult?
> >> I use it on my netbook, which I admittedly don't boot more than a
> >> couple of times a month. It's stable, I can't comment on the
> >> switching process as I used GRUB2 from the start with this
> >> machine, it seemed a good time to get to grips with it.
> >>
> >> GRUB2 is neither complicated nor difficult, but it is different.
> > I've only used it on Ubuntu, and maybe it's just Ubuntu's
> > implementation -- but it was both complicated and difficult.  There
> > are 10X as many files, and to change anything you edit a whole set
> > of configuration files and run a utility that generates _another_
> > set of configuration files.
> >
> > Compared to "vi /boot/grub/menu.lst; reboot", that's complicated.
> >
> >> If you try to think in terms of legacy GRUB, you will have more
> >> problems than if you approach is as learning a new system.
> > At first glace, grub2 looks like a minature Unix installation whose
> > purpose is to boot a bigger Unix installation.  It's got it's own
> > init system and it's own set of init scripts.
> >
> 
> Could this fix the mess with /usr and /var having to be on / or a 
> initramfs?

No that's a completely different issue.

But the warped thinking that produces it is exactly the same.



-- 
Alan McKinnnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com

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