Denis Washington writes: > - The Ubuntu entries as the kernel version ("Ubuntu, with kernel > 3.2.0-9...") that do not relate to anything that we usually present > the user. It would be much nicer if we had the actual Ubuntu version > stand there instead, so that the entry just becomes "Ubuntu 12.04".
Adding the Ubuntu version would be a big help. I recently upgraded a Natty desktop to Oneiric by cloning the Natty partition, then upgrading one of the clones. The Natty had been a fresh install, and there were no other OS partitions on the system. After the install, my grub screen had 22 lines (!), with labels like Ubuntu, with Linux 2.6.38-12-generic There was no way to tell which entries were for Natty, which were for Oneiric, and which were an unbootable mixture of Natty partition with Oneiric kernel (but no Oneiric modules) or vice versa. After poking at it for a while, I gave up and switched to extlinux so I'd have some control over the boot menu. If the entries had offered some clue about Ubuntu version (or even root partition), I might have stuck with grub2. You can't just omit the kernel entirely: grub generates lines for all kernels available in /boot, so you'd end up with 11 lines of "Ubuntu 11.10" and no way to tell them apart. But the "last known good kernel" idea is a good one; you could also have "newest installed kernel", since update-grub is typically run after installing a new kernel but before rebooting. So you could use readable strings for those two cases, and only show the kernel names for other cases. ...Akkana -- Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss