Am 18.08.19 um 15:44 schrieb Carlos E. R.:
On 17/08/2019 20.54, zb4ng wrote:
No, it doesn't.
You have to boot the system which controls grub and make it run os-prober so that it finds the actual kernel entries of the other system.
There are other ways.
You can manually edit the grub file that is intended for manual edit, and create an entry for the "vmlinuz" symlink this one is maintained by zypper.
Yeah it looks like I can use "menuentry" in /boot/grub2/custom.cfg and put the symlink in there?
Or, after making sure that both installs have their own grub installed to the root partition, not to the MBR, add manually on each one (in the file intended for manual edit) an entry for the other grub, not to the kernel.
Maybe if I can't figure out grub configurationb , I'll try to add grub to my 15.1-system -(Do I have to move the existing Grub from MBR to 15.0?) - and see if they find each other. Otherwise, I am ok with using the method mentioned in my earlier post. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org