On Mon, Aug 28, 2017 at 01:51:34PM -0400, fsmithred wrote:
> On 08/28/2017 10:55 AM, Hendrik Boom wrote:
> > Grub seems a lot more complicated now than it used to be a few years
> > ago when I last upgraded Debian from one release to another.
> >
> > My usual procedure is to copy the system to new partitions (adjusting
> > the size according to what I actually guess I might need),
> > editig the copied /etc/fstab, making sure the old and new systems boot
> > properly and mount the right partitions, and then upgrading the new
> > one.
>
> Copy the system to the new partition.
> Edit fstab in the new partition.
> Boot into the new partition from grub command line.
> Type 'c' at the boot menu to get a grub prompt.
> Example: (Edit as needed. Drives count from zero, partitions count from one.)
> set root=(hd0,msdos3)
> linux /vmlinuz ro root=/dev/sda3
> initrd /initrd.img
> boot
>
> Then when you're in the new system, run
> grub-install /dev/sda
> update-grub
>
> This will put the system on the new partition in charge of booting and
> will generat a new menu. It should also make a boot entry for the
> old system.
Do I understand correctly that grub-install will scan my only hard
drive looking for (at least) bootable Linux systems? And that as a
result, running grub-install on the old system will detect both and
create a grub menu that contains both?
(of course, using the grub files on the old system, which I'd better
not delete if I still want to boot)
-- hendrik
>
> fsmithred
>
>
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