On Sat, 30 Jun 2012 20:30:10 -0500, Paul Hartman wrote: > You can also make/maintain the grub.cfg yourself with grub2, just like > in old grub. In fact this is what I do... I don't use the > grub2-mkconfig each time, I only used it once to generate a file and > then edited it by hand after that. It is simply a tool to generate a > config file, certainly not a requirement.
You can also have the best of both worlds by adding a custom entry in /etc/grub.d. That's what I do so I get my standard menu with all the options I want, in the order I want, but still have all older kernels listed below, just in case I'm feeling nostalgic. -- Neil Bothwick Taglines are like cars - You get a good one, then someone nicks it.
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