On 08/28/2015 06:48 PM, Paul Cartwright wrote:

every time you boot into a specific distro, update the system, and
install a new kernel, well, then grub needs to be updated.

To be clear: the grub configuration needs to be updated. Grub, the program, does not. Installing a new kernel does not, for instance, involve running grub2-install.

MY problem
is, I want to keep ubuntu updated, but I always want fedora grub to be
the default.. I don't think they thought about all these situations when
they created grub...

The best way to do that is to boot Fedora and run grub2-mkconfig each time you update Ubuntu kernels.

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