Thanks
On Wed, Oct 3, 2018 at 11:46 PM Iznogoud <iznogoud at nobelware.com> wrote:
>
> >
> > I'll start here - - - -its clear that you didn't read what I said - -
> > -I wanted to use two
> > different kernels from the SAME distribution and that I just couldn't
> > get to work and I
> > couldn't find nada on line about it either. Doing it for different
> > *nixes - - - sorry that's
> > easy and I have done that in the past its trying to do it for the same
> > os and just have
> > two significantly (4.0.9 (iirc) and 4.16 (again iirc)) different
> > kernels that proved part of
> > the unfindable (sic) continuum. I just couldn't find a way to stick
> > those two together.
>
>
> OK, OK. Think what you want. Here is my final attempt, in the spirit of
> keeping the discussion productive.
>
> The way to do what you want is to simply edit the grub.conf and add a menu
> entry that uses the kernel that you want to use. You can boot from the same
> root filesystem (say /dev/sda1, or whatever), you can boot from a different
> one, a duplicated one, a different drive, etc. With some simple GRUB command
> line typing/editing and by knowing what you are doing, it can be done.
>
> Here is how.
>
> Start here for a very brief sample:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jqysW8RmRBU
> (This guy is doing it in a virtual machine, which is what I had recommended
> that you do to "practice" and not screw anything up, but you shut the idea
> down for nonsense reasons.)
>
> Here is a more verbose solution that matches your needs:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i97y5Y2nChs
> At the beginning he tells you how you can "lose" a bootloader... maybe not
> important to you. Then, fast-forward to 8:29, where he tells you what he is
> going to do, and walks you through the steps of modifying the grub.conf.
> Now recall from the previous video what keywords were given to GRUB from the
> command line, like "linux /vmlinuz" and so on. These are arguments/switches
> that go into a GRUB "menu item" as you will see. This guy's grub.conf is
> built from an automated configuration from the grub-mkconfig or whatever,
> and so it is very populated with crap. But he goes right ahead and cleans
> them up, does what he wants, etc. You want to get a menu item that has the
> booting from the standard kernel of the distro, and duplicate it with the
> new kernel in the new menu item. When you are done, you do not even have to
> re-install the bootloader; it is that simple.
>
> Here is a less useful, more laborious process, video that uses external toosls:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUWpUdCWFbI
>
> Here is another good one that will teach you a thing or two:
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prHDES9XmjU
> This one starts with the standard GRUB configuration that does the auto-
> detect thing again, which somebody pointed out on this list.
>
> I hope this helps.
>
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