===
When installing to a system containing an existing installation of
either the same Fedora release or either of the two previous releases,
the installer must configure the new installation's bootloader such that
it can successfully boot the existing installation.
[Footnote]
On Mon, 2014-11-10 at 05:29 -0500, Kamil Paral wrote:
I was about to mention the same, Fedora UEFI dual-boot requires a lot
of manual tweaking at the moment, and I guess it's not something that
can be changed and properly tested in a few weeks.
For me it actually works OK in a smoke test with
On 11/07/2014 04:24 PM, Peter Jones wrote:
On Fri, Nov 07, 2014 at 11:34:16AM -0800, Adam Williamson wrote:
More criteria time, folks!
So we managed to get the Windows multi-boot criterion revised and an OS
X multi-boot criterion added, but we did not yet manage to come to a
consensus on
On Sat, 2014-11-08 at 08:45 -0500, Gene Czarcinski wrote:
Before discussion any criteria for whatever release, perhaps there
should be a discussion on how we would like things to work and what we
really do not care about. Also, I believe that the appropriate place
for this discussion is
More criteria time, folks!
So we managed to get the Windows multi-boot criterion revised and an OS
X multi-boot criterion added, but we did not yet manage to come to a
consensus on exactly what should be required for Linux multi-boot.
I think Chris will re-propose his last idea and we can
On Fri, 2014-11-07 at 11:34 -0800, Adam Williamson wrote:
More criteria time, folks!
So we managed to get the Windows multi-boot criterion revised and an OS
X multi-boot criterion added, but we did not yet manage to come to a
consensus on exactly what should be required for Linux multi-boot.
On Fri, Nov 07, 2014 at 11:34:16AM -0800, Adam Williamson wrote:
More criteria time, folks!
So we managed to get the Windows multi-boot criterion revised and an OS
X multi-boot criterion added, but we did not yet manage to come to a
consensus on exactly what should be required for Linux