Andrew Benton wrote:
Giorgio <[email protected]> wrote:
[...]
>> What to do? Could you suggest where I mistook? What to do now: remove
>> (but how?) Grub and reinstall it?
GRUB is not something to "remove". If one no longer wants GRUB, then
one simply overwrites it with something else.
> You don't need to reinstall grub. If it's working Ok and you can boot
> into LFS then just edit grub.cfg to make an entry for windows,
> something like this:
>
> menuentry "Windows" {
> set root=(hd0,1)
> chainloader +1
> }
Back when I was making a dual boot system, this didn't work
for me. I had a machine which "wanted" the Windows Boot Manager
to be in control of boot. Fortunately, the Windows Boot Manager
is actually a reasonable piece of software, and I was able to
configure it to load GRUB for me.
What you suggest may work in most circumstances, and it's the
solution I usually see, but it is not a universal solution.
Mac
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