How to change console font in grub2?

JD jd1008 at gmail.com
Sat Oct 16 04:22:33 UTC 2010


  On 10/15/2010 08:29 PM, Tom H wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 6:18 PM, Tom Horsley<horsley1953 at gmail.com>  wrote:
>> On Fri, 15 Oct 2010 16:27:37 -0500 Dennis Gilmore wrote:
>>> the path to it being the
>>> default resides in more usage testing and bug fixing in fedora
>> The path to it being a viable option first has to go through
>> the process of the utter elimination of the foolish update-grub
>> preprocessor to construct the grub.cfg file from a million
>> bits and pieces.
>>
>> Grub originally cleaned lilo's clock primarily because you
>> didn't have to remember to run extra tools to make the changes
>> take effect. Now the standard usage for grub2 requires running
>> extra tools again. Does no one remember how many problems
>> that caused?
>>
>> One of the primary reasons it must not use a preprocessor
>> (particularly the way it is currently distributed) is that
>> you cannot actually configure everything you might need to
>> change. You can fall back on editing various files you
>> aren't supposed to edit, but the next grub2 update you
>> get will probably overwrite your changes.
>>
>> You can even edit the grub.cfg file if you want to, but the
>> next kernel update will overwrite your changes.
>>
>> Until the one and only place grub config information is
>> stored is the one grub.cfg file, grub2 is unacceptably
>> boneheaded and should not be the standard boot loader.
> You're being unfair to grub2! :)
>
> Unlike lilo, grub2-mkconfig doesn't re-write the MBR; a big
> difference. Also, in grub1, grubby edits "/boot/grub/grub.conf" when a
> new kernel is installed so grub1's behavior isn't that different from
> grub2's.
I have not used grubby directly, but when a new kernel is installed,
the only annoying change is that the new kernel entry is on top
of all previous entries, AND the default boot number is bumped up by one
so that default boot is the same kernel you have been booting.
I find this acceptable and least intrusive of the two options (grub1 vs. 
grub2).
I hope that the user will always be given the option of choosing which
grub to stick with rather than be shoe-horned into using grub-2.



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