I mean run "update-grub" from the Ubuntu distribution.  It is the control.

On Sun, Jul 10, 2016 at 11:38 AM, Tod Merley <todbo...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On a multi-boot machine the big question is “who controls the boot
> process”.
>
>
> My “big box” has two SSD (Ubuntu, CentOS) a 1T HDD (eight Linux partitions
> if memory serves) and a small clunky HDD with W7.
>
>
> In this case I choose Ubuntu to control the boot process and understand
> that if I update the Kernel in any of the other distros I will not be able
> to boot to it unless I run update-grub (Ubuntu script similar to your
> mkconfig command) which will look at all the partitions and disks to boot
> to the most recent first.
>
>
> Likely CentOS is your current control and it likely uses an older grub.
>
>
> Choose a recent “grub2” distro and make it your “boot control”.
>
--
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