On Thu, Jan 03, 2013 at 12:34:30PM +0000, Chris Green wrote: > On Thu, Jan 03, 2013 at 10:32:14AM +0000, Chris Green wrote: > > On Wed, Jan 02, 2013 at 04:46:30PM -0700, Aere Greenway wrote: > > > Chris: > > > > > > I am far from an expert on this, but my recent experience seems to > > > indicate you need to put GRUB on the disk that automatically gets > > > booted > > > from. > > > > > > I have often seen the installer recommend putting it on the secondary > > > drive, which doesn't work. You can't just use what the installer > > > suggests. > > > > > > What you describe suggests that the installation process put your new > > > GRUB > > > on the other drive, and when you booted, it went to the old GRUB, which > > > was left untouched on the first drive, but where it pointed was no > > > longer > > > a system. > > > > > That's much what I think too but I'm not sure I was given the > > opportunity to decide where to put Grub. I guess I can try once more > > (third time lucky!) and concentrate hard on the Grub installation > > questions when they come up. > > > Well it says it's found 'other' operating systems (which are the old > Ubuntu 11.10 installation) and that if this is all then it's safe to > install Grub on the MBR. So I say 'yes'. > > However the result seems to be that I get the *old* grub still. I'll > just go and say 'Yes' to installing Grub on the MBR and see what the > result is. > ... and the result is the same, I get the Grub menu from the old 11.10 installation (with the 11.10 being the default boot at the top of the list).
It seems as if the new installation doesn't see the 'first disk' as the actual first disk used when the system boots. -- Chris Green -- Lubuntu-users mailing list Lubuntu-users@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/lubuntu-users