Hello, Personally I would find it much simpler to do 'set gfxmode=1024x600' in grub.cfg (I run a separate grub partition with a manually maintained config).
Regards, John On Mon., 12 Oct. 2020, 23:12 pe pi, <pe...@mail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > im not sure > > if you install one linux machine, maybe this tool will be unnecessary. > > but if you will install for example 10 linux machines it will be usefull. > > i think better solution will be if tools like this be a part of linux > main install. > > pe pi > > > On 12. 10. 2020 13:41, Gard Spreemann wrote: > > pe pi <pe...@mail.com> writes: > > > >> 1) Open Terminal > >> > >> 2) Type: sudo nano /etc/default/grub > >> > >> 3) Find the line starting with GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT, and add > >> video=hyperv_fb:[the resolution you want]. > >> So my line ends up looking like this: > >> GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet splash video=hyperv_fb:1366x768" > >> > >> 4) Write the changes and quit nano > >> > >> 5) Run: sudo update-grub > >> > >> 6) Reboot the virtual machine run: sudo reboot > >> > >> ... and i have developed console application which do it this way ... > >> > >> sudo hypervscrres --set grub 1366x768 update reboot yes > >> > >> ... and all application variants of use looks like this ... > >> > >> sudo hypervscrres --help > >> sudo hypervscrres --get grub > >> sudo hypervscrres --set grub 1366x768 > >> sudo hypervscrres --set grub 1366x768 update > >> sudo hypervscrres --set grub 1366x768 update reboot > >> sudo hypervscrres --set grub 1366x768 update reboot yes > >> yes | sudo hypervscrres --set grub 1366x768 update reboot > > Hello, > > > > Are you sure that potential users of your program will find it easier to > > install your program and run it than it is to perform the original task > > that your program is meant to replace? > > > > > > -- Gard > > > >