On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 10:24 AM, Sam Varshavchik <mr...@courier-mta.com> wrote:


> I edited GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in /etc/default/grub before I installed
> the most recent kernel update. However the grub entry for the new
> kernel did not reflect my changes in the updated /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
>
> Digging into this, it appears that the kernel packages run the grubby
> tool which appears to be responsible for updating grub.cfg, and it
> does that, apparently (not 100% sure) by cloning existing kernel
> entries; and the /etc/default/grub file comes from the grub2-tool
> package, and grubby doesn't know anything about it.

"/etc/default/grub" is used by "grub2-mkconfig" and not by "grubby".


> If I run grub2-mkconfig, it generates something completely different
> from the existing grub.cfg. I have not analyzed the differences, but
> using the output of grub2-mkconfig seems risky; not sure if subsequent
> invocations of grubby will deal with it.
>
> Did anyone use grub2-mkconfig before, to generate a new grub.cfg, and
> then subsequently installed kernels new without grubby causing any
> issues?

All distros other that Fedora and RHEL (and its clones) use
"grub2-mkconfig". I use it everywhere that I use grub2 without a
problem.

In order to get the dracut options on the kernel cmdline that the
default Fedora "etc/grub2.cfg" has, you have to add them to
"/etc/default/grub" before running "grub2-mkconfig".

"grubby" dupes the top line for the new kernel so you can use it after
using "grub2-mkconfig".
_______________________________________________
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe send an email to users-le...@lists.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to