Feature changed by: Christian Boltz (cboltz) Feature #310856, revision 3 Title: don't remove custom grub entries openSUSE-11.4: Unconfirmed Priority Requester: Important Requested by: Christian Boltz (cboltz) Partner organization: openSUSE.org Description: from https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=648565 (written by Nico Gruber): Applying a kernel update will delete custom grub entries with this - kernel and add a default one Steps to Reproduce: 1. duplicate a grub - entry and add some parameter to the kernel command line 2. update - kernel, e.g. by doing auto-update with one of the provided kernel - updates Actual Results: the created custom entry in grub which uses - the outdated kernel which has now been updated is removed, a default - entry is created, e.g. "Desktop -- openSUSE 11.3 - 2.6.34.7-0.4" - Expected Results: all (custom) entries with the updated kernel should + kernel and add a default one + Steps to Reproduce: + 1) duplicate a grub entry and add some parameter to the kernel command + line + 2) update kernel, e.g. by doing auto-update with one of the provided + kernel updates + Actual Results: the created custom entry in grub which uses the + outdated kernel which has now been updated is removed, a default entry + is created, e.g. "Desktop -- openSUSE 11.3 - 2.6.34.7-0.4" + Expected Results: all (custom) entries with the updated kernel should be changed in order to boot the new one - without changing either the name of the entry, nor any parameters Custom entries can be there for various reasons, and I need them on nearly every system I use (see "use cases"). Please change perl-bootloader as described in "Expected Results" above. It should not remove or change any entry in menu.lst, except filename changes of kernel and initrd at a kernel update. Use Case: * Servers with RAID: fallback entry to boot from the second disk * abusing ;-) a boot parameter like x11failsave to switch between two xorg.conf files without hacking the initscript Business case (Partner benefit): openSUSE.org: Because custom bootloader entries are used quite often, and it's very annoying if you have to re-add them at every kernel update. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/310856