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From: | Isaac Dupree |
Subject: | Re: Searching UUID on floppies |
Date: | Sat, 31 May 2008 17:56:59 -0400 |
User-agent: | Thunderbird 2.0.0.14 (X11/20080505) |
Robert Millan wrote:
On Sat, May 31, 2008 at 03:06:30PM -0400, Isaac Dupree wrote:Robert Millan wrote:Some of our commands use --no-floppy. Also supported in GRUB Legacy (by 'find' or so, can't remember). Perhaps it's better to use that for consistency? ItI don't know if it's relevant... but there is a situation that is maybe similar when my MacBook boots up (before it even gets to GRUB), if there's a CD in the drive, it wastes about 15 extra seconds spinning it up to look at it, even if I'm not booting from CD. So that might be a sort of thing to watch out for, when making GRUB search?is the floppy scan which everyone hates; for other devices I don't think people will mind if GRUB spends a few ms on them.Does it happen before or after you get the "Welcome to GRUB!" message?
*That* happens even if I never enter grub at all -- so I guess you would say "before". GRUB doesn't have that problem for me as far as I know, but the only things I have in my config are (hd0,x) -- no boot-from-CD option, only the Linuxes on the disk that I have configured precisely and numerically.
look, here is my boot sequence:EFI firmware boots the MacOSX partition by default, if I don't hold down "option"/"alt" (if I do, then the firmware puts up a menu of choices).
rEFIt is installed in such a way that it is booted rather the standard MacOSX at that point. It puts up a nice menu of choices including MacOS, any bootable CD/DVDs, and all the GRUBs it can find. It's rEFIt's appearance that is delayed when there's a CD in the drive. rEFIt knows how to boot both EFI and BIOS GRUBs.
-- MacOSX: boots normally if selected in rEFIt.-- GRUB2: well, you know about that. From there, I can potentially boot my Linuxes that are on various of my partitions.
-Isaac
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