Thanks guys, sorry for being unclear. I'm not using grub-reboot, and I've
certainly haven't done any administrative tasks. The only sudo command in
my history is shutdown. This is a production computer.

This is what has happened:
1. Timeout is 10 s like it's always been.
2. Computer is left unattended.
3. Timeout has disappeared.
4. I do grub-install and setup (never can remember which one to use), don't
get the expected run through of boot partitions, so I remove an older
kernel package.
5. 10 s timeout is back

I've certainly not been messing with boot partitions/records lately so my
question is: can this value somehow change by itself? How can I reproduce
this phenomenon?

On Tuesday, June 2, 2015, <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tuesday, June 02, 2015 03:02 AM, Andrei Borzenkov wrote:
>>
>> В Mon, 1 Jun 2015 19:44:04 +0200
>> Sverker Albatross <[email protected]> пишет:
>>
>>> I have an offline computer (I'm the only user) that's suddenly had its
mbr
>>> changed. I had a 10 s timeout, who suddenly has disappeared.  By
removing
>>> one older kernel package the timeout is there again. Can anyone explain
>>> what's going on? It's a stripped kubuntu 12.04, offline/unupdated/wifi
>>> disabled since 6 months back.
>>>
>>> Would anyone like to explain how/where/when the grub timeout is written?
>>
>> Some distributions disable timeout if one-time boot menu entry is set
>> (grub-reboot); and in some cases grub cannot reset it during boot.
>> Removing kernel likely triggers bootloader reconfiguration which /may/
>> rewrite grubenv.
>>
>> There is not really enough information to make a guess.
>
> Hi,
>
> In ubuntu, there's a configuration file /etc/default/grub that sets the
GRUB_TIMEOUT value. Installing/removing a kernel will run update-grub which
reads it and create /boot/grub/grub.cfg. You can also run update-grub
manually if you change it.
>
> Hope this helps,
> ST
> --
>
>
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