Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Fri, 11 Nov 2011 17:40:26 -0600, Dale wrote:
The next thing you do is configure it to boot into text mode with all
the kernel messages visible. Then you've got something that's almost
tolerable.
< cough cough> Care to share how you did that little trick? I like
to see the stuff scrolling up myself.
Hold Shift during boot to bring up the GRUB menu, press E to edit, remove
the splash and quiet options and press Ctrl-X to boot. It's almost the
same as legacy GRUB, with just enough changes to confuse people :(
Tp make it permanent, edit /etc/default/grub, remove the splash and quiet
options, save the file and run grub2-mkconfig (or the wrapper script that
Ubuntu provide, update-grub?).
Is there a way after the install to add a Windoze OS to grub and all?
I unplugged the windoze drive to make sure it didn't mess that up OR I
mess up something. So, grub, or some bootloader, is installed on the
wrong drive in this case.
Plug the drive back in and run grub2-mkconfig. It will generate a new
menu with a Windows option. No manual editing needed.
Oh nooooooooo. It can't be that easy. O_O I'm going to screw
something up you watch. lol
Dale
:-) :-)
Oh, how do I boot it the first time tho? When I plug the windoze drive
up, there won't be a grub. Yet anyway. Hmmmmm.