This is a Fedora - windows dual-boot system, 64-bit.
This afternoon, I updated to Fedora-20 using fedup. But Fedora-20 is not offered in the boot window. I see three options for Fedora-19, and a windows option. I can sign on to Fedora-19, but the left and right screens are reversed! (This is a dual monitor system.) This is a home system.
I'm not a sys. admin. How do I get this system to boot up Fedora-20?
thanks, Bill.
On Jan 20, 2014, at 2:37 PM, William mattison.computer@yahoo.com wrote:
This is a Fedora - windows dual-boot system, 64-bit.
This afternoon, I updated to Fedora-20 using fedup. But Fedora-20 is not offered in the boot window. I see three options for Fedora-19, and a windows option. I can sign on to Fedora-19, but the left and right screens are reversed! (This is a dual monitor system.) This is a home system.
I'm not a sys. admin. How do I get this system to boot up Fedora-20?
No idea. Let's see the partition layout for the drive and the grub.cfg. You can download this script from F19, run it, and post the resulting file it produces somewhere like pastebin.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/bootinfoscript/
Chris Murphy
On 01/20/2014 04:37 PM, William wrote:
This is a Fedora - windows dual-boot system, 64-bit.
This afternoon, I updated to Fedora-20 using fedup. But Fedora-20 is not offered in the boot window.
Sometimes I've had to update the grub selections manually, using:
grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg grub2-install /dev/sda
Not for the faint of heart, however. Beware.
- Mike
Allegedly, on or about 20 January 2014, William sent:
I can sign on to Fedora-19, but the left and right screens are reversed! (This is a dual monitor system.)
You should be able to drag and drop the monitor icons around into the order that you want, in the displays properties configurator.
On Mon, 20 Jan 2014 16:37:56 -0500 William mattison.computer@yahoo.com wrote:
This is a Fedora - windows dual-boot system, 64-bit.
This afternoon, I updated to Fedora-20 using fedup. But Fedora-20 is not offered in the boot window.
rpm -q kernel, to see if you have an *fc20* kernel
___ Regards, Frank www.frankly3d.com