Em sábado, 22 de Outubro de 2016 22:17:35 WEST, Mark Neidorff
<m...@neidorff.com> escreveu:
On Friday, 10/21/16 10:19:47 PM Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 21/10/2016 à 20:56, Mark Neidorff a écrit :
> So, the next step was to clean out the other distros. I
used gparted to
> delete no longer needed partitions and to expand other
partitions to fill
> the space. All is now good.
>
> I then ran
>
> #update-grub
>
> hoping that would regenerate the grub boot menu, (I also tried
> #update-grub2) but the old entries still appear when the system boots.
Are you talking about entries in GRUB's menu or in the UEFI boot menu ?
Grub menu. (I don't see a UEFI menu)
update-grub only updates the former.
Good.
What is the output of "os-prober" ?
No output. (yes, I ran it as root)
Are you sure the GRUB that shows up is the one from Debian ?
I'm not sure how to answer that question. The first OS I installed was
OpenSUSE. Then I installed Debian 8.6 twice (on the two
separate drives in
the system). All three of these entries are still there even
after running
update-grub.
Have you mounted the EFI partition? Update-grub change grub, I don't think
it changes the FIE partitions. And check motherboard bios/uefi for the
default entry
I wouldn't care about the extra entries except that the
OpenSUSE entry is the
default. I want Debian to be the default (and, yes there is only one
instance of Debian installed). Yes I tried changing the value
of the default
before I ran update-grub, but that didn't help.
Thanks for any help,
Mark
Bandarra
--
Enviado do Dekko através do meu dispositivo Ubuntu.