Chris Stout <chris.stout <at> gmx.com> writes:
> I think update-grub was the command for legacy grub. > On my system the appropriate command is grub2-mkconfig. yep, that did the trick..... > > As a side note to James, if you don't see your secondary kernels on the > grub2 screen on boot, look under the advanced options. My grub2 setup > seems to put extra kernels under the advanced tab. Yep, right again. (grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg) > I don't recall making any changes to Grub2 so it might be the > default behaviour. Yep. OK, so how to I make the latest kernel, copied to /boot/ the default on that shows up. Tabing to the advanced does work but I'm guessing I'll need to flush this out, because one these days, the default kernel will be deleted. So any advise on how to update the default kernel, once one is happy with it? Also, grub2 seems to take a long time to beging booting any fixes for that? Also, it (grub2) is not displaying any verbose info to the screen, except at the very end.....? Settings to tweak for a quick, verbose grub2 boot experience? James