Il 08/04/20 13:40, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
On Apr 8, 2020, at 04:01, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
Il 08/04/20 01:46, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
grubby only alters the existing configuration. It never regenerates the
grub.cfg in EFI.
You can’t use “grub2-mkconfig” to create individual b
On Wed, Apr 08, 2020 at 07:40:24AM -0400, Jonathan Billings wrote:
> If you need to update kernel parameters, use grubby. That’s what is
> run in the kernel package install scripts (via
> new-kernel-package). That’s what is run in packages like the nvidia
> 3rd party packages.
Sorry, it's 'new-k
On Apr 8, 2020, at 04:01, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
>
> Il 08/04/20 01:46, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
>>
>> grubby only alters the existing configuration. It never regenerates the
>> grub.cfg in EFI.
>>
>> You can’t use “grub2-mkconfig” to create individual boot spec entries.
>>
>> --
>> Jo
Am 08.04.20 um 10:01 schrieb Alessandro Baggi:
Il 08/04/20 01:46, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
On Apr 7, 2020, at 04:14, Alessandro Baggi
wrote:
thank you for your explanation. So in el8 grubby should be used to
update kernel opts and grub2-mkconfig is used to generate an initial
config.
I
On Wed, Apr 8, 2020 at 1:31 PM Alessandro Baggi
wrote:
> Il 08/04/20 01:46, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
> > On Apr 7, 2020, at 04:14, Alessandro Baggi
> wrote:
> >> thank you for your explanation. So in el8 grubby should be used to
> update kernel opts and grub2-mkconfig is used to generate an
Il 08/04/20 01:46, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
On Apr 7, 2020, at 04:14, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
thank you for your explanation. So in el8 grubby should be used to update
kernel opts and grub2-mkconfig is used to generate an initial config.
If I'm not wrong, grubby updates every single (spe
On Apr 7, 2020, at 04:14, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
> thank you for your explanation. So in el8 grubby should be used to update
> kernel opts and grub2-mkconfig is used to generate an initial config.
>
> If I'm not wrong, grubby updates every single (sperated) entries on
> /boot/loader/entries an
Il 06/04/20 20:51, Jonathan Billings ha scritto:
On Mon, Apr 06, 2020 at 04:03:53PM +0200, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
I'm on 8.1. I'm searching help to see if this is a bug or error by me but
can't find nothing.
Currently I used grubby but it does not write any file that I know like
/boot/efi/EFI
On Mon, Apr 06, 2020 at 04:03:53PM +0200, Alessandro Baggi wrote:
> I'm on 8.1. I'm searching help to see if this is a bug or error by me but
> can't find nothing.
> Currently I used grubby but it does not write any file that I know like
> /boot/efi/EFI/centos/grub.cfg (I tried to remove and add ar
Il 06/04/20 15:21, Simon Matter via CentOS ha scritto:
Il 06/04/20 11:54, Georgios ha scritto:
Hi there!
I had a similar problem recently with grub. No idea why it doesnt work.
Try using grubby instead of grub2-mkconfig if you want the system to
keep your kernel parameters between boots.
Someth
> Il 06/04/20 11:54, Georgios ha scritto:
>> Hi there!
>> I had a similar problem recently with grub. No idea why it doesnt work.
>> Try using grubby instead of grub2-mkconfig if you want the system to
>> keep your kernel parameters between boots.
>>
>> Something like:
>>
>> sudo grubby --args="i91
Il 06/04/20 14:42, Georgios ha scritto:
Hi,
I tried as suggested, parameters will be updated but I get already
crash. So I tried to remove also rhgb and quiet and works well.
Would be good to know what is wrong with grub2-mkconfig.
Where start to investigate?
No idea. I stop looking af
>
> Hi,
>
> I tried as suggested, parameters will be updated but I get already
> crash. So I tried to remove also rhgb and quiet and works well.
>
> Would be good to know what is wrong with grub2-mkconfig.
>
> Where start to investigate?
>
>
No idea. I stop looking after I manage to pass
Il 06/04/20 11:54, Georgios ha scritto:
Hi there!
I had a similar problem recently with grub. No idea why it doesnt work.
Try using grubby instead of grub2-mkconfig if you want the system to
keep your kernel parameters between boots.
Something like:
sudo grubby --args="i915.modeset=0 rd.driver.
Hi there!
I had a similar problem recently with grub. No idea why it doesnt work.
Try using grubby instead of grub2-mkconfig if you want the system to
keep your kernel parameters between boots.
Something like:
sudo grubby --args="i915.modeset=0 rd.driver.blacklist=i915" --update-
kernel=ALL
Hop
Hi list,
I reinstalled on my workstation CentOS 8.1.
I explain: I'm a KDE user but packages shipped from EPEL currently are
buggy so I prefer a stable and functioning system to work with. So I
tried to remove KDE workgroup and installed group "Workstation" but the
system bricked so I reinstal
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