Michael Schwendt responded: > Well, what do you get when you run > rpm -qa grub\* >? If it shows that "grub2" is installed, examine the package's list of > files and look into how to use GRUB2. ---------- [root@f16a9 ~]# rpm -qa grub\* grub-efi-0.97-84.fc16.i686 grub2-1.99-13.fc16.3.i686 grubby-8.8-2.fc16.i686 [root@f16a9 ~]# yum list installed | grep grub grub-efi.i686 1:0.97-84.fc16 @anaconda-0 grub2.i686 1:1.99-13.fc16.3 @anaconda-0 grubby.i686 8.8-2.fc16 @anaconda-0 [root@f16a9 ~]# [root@f16a9 ~]# locate grub2 /home/byers/Downloads/GRUB 2 bootloader - Full tutorial_files/grub2-00.jpg /home/byers/Downloads/GRUB 2 bootloader - Full tutorial_files/grub2-05.jpg /home/byers/Downloads/GRUB 2 bootloader - Full tutorial_files/grub2-40.jpg /home/byers/Downloads/GRUB 2 bootloader - Full tutorial_files/grub2-add-chainload.png /home/byers/Downloads/GRUB 2 bootloader - Full tutorial_files/grub2-boot-grub.jpg /home/byers/Downloads/GRUB 2 bootloader - Full tutorial_files/grub2-chainload.png many more what do i do with these image files? how to view them? isn't Downloads a peculiar place for documentation? isn't there some standard/automatic way to use grub2? or do I still need a series of "configure" steps? Jack -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org