Am 02.12.2015 um 21:16 schrieb Andrew Lutomirski:
On Wed, Dec 2, 2015 at 11:54 AM, Josh Boyer
<jwboyer(a)fedoraproject.org> wrote:
> That's a matter of preference. If I have a newer kernel version
> installed that doesn't actually work, I want the older kernel I _just_
> installed to be the default and top entry so my machine boots to
> something I can use. This happens often when people try rawhide -rcX
> kernels to test something.
>
> Fixing this might be better served by filing an RFE for grubby to
> change the preference order.
Or file an RFE for grub2 to have an option to use the file timestamps
instead of the version for the sort order
breaking news: file timestamps of packages are independent of the
install time so this can't work - any attributes like timestamp, owner,
permision are part of the package for good reasons (rkhunter as example
compares them with the rpm database)