On Thu, Dec 16, 2004 at 05:53:42AM -0500, Phil Schaffner wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-14 at 10:54 -0700, Jim B wrote:
> I run several systems that have two or more versions of Linux that I
> use/test.
Not yet, AFAIK...
The way I found the most practical in such situation is to have "the
main" grub menu which really only is a dispatcher and does
'chainload ...' for any of "second tier" particular OS specific
loader installed on boot partitions for every (sub)installation.
For Linux this will be a separate for each version copy of grub; not
even necessarily the same grub variant.
Now any changes by update tools (anaconda, yum, whatever ... )
affect only what is relevant and these tools are not even aware of
other stuff. As a side effect you may now have not only a default
boot entry in the top menu but also a default entry for every of
subinstallations. Much easier to maintain the whole structure as you
never have to worry what belongs to what.
I guess that I will drop the above in comments there.
Michal