On 03/13/2015 02:44 PM, Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
* Elimar Riesebieter <riese...@lxtec.de> [2015-03-13 19:33 +0100]:
* Jape Person <jap...@comcast.net> [2015-03-13 14:12 -0400]:
[...]
However, I can't get grub-set-default to redesignate that new menu entry as
the default.
Here is how I use it:
The first menu entry is 0 which points to my latest kernel.
The second menu entry points to a submenu where all kernels are
listed. So if I want to boot the third entry in the second menu I
just type as root:
# grub-reboot "1>2"
Forgot to mention that grub-set-default works the same way ;-)
Duh is me!
I was proceeding on the assumption that the menu numbering started with
'1', since I actually read that while searching for information. (Yes,
somebody posted on an Ubuntu how-to site that grub2 menu numbering
starts with '1'.)
Anyway, everything is peachy now. I have a new strategy for running fsck
only when I want to on remote systems.
Thank you for your help, Elimar.
Best,
JP
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