On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 9:34 PM, Jeff Spaleta <jspaleta@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Why? I might have a different view on what major distributions are compared to other people. For me major distributions are RHEL, Fedora, Ubuntu, Novell and Debian. But some people might think different, that's fine. All of the distributions I've mentioned could be identified by /etc/lsb-release. If someone else think: "Oh my favorit distribution is XY and could be identified by /etc/blablabla!", fine, let's add it to the identification routine and become a better OS ...
Who cares? If they are leading distributions, someone will have a installation of them and might be able to check how they can be identified. If not, they are unkown distributions, that's also fine, the main thing is they are detected and added to the GRUB menu after installation.
This is not necessary. It is necessary to add an entry for those distributions to GRUB during installation. If they are identified by a correct name or by unkown distribution is completly unimportant. If someone on the list has an installation of this distribution he might contribute the relevant information.
Regards, Thomas
2009/2/4 Thomas Bendler <ml@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
> At least that should be sufficent to detect the major distributions by name andDefine major distribution
> some other by simply an unknown entry in GRUB.
Why? I might have a different view on what major distributions are compared to other people. For me major distributions are RHEL, Fedora, Ubuntu, Novell and Debian. But some people might think different, that's fine. All of the distributions I've mentioned could be identified by /etc/lsb-release. If someone else think: "Oh my favorit distribution is XY and could be identified by /etc/blablabla!", fine, let's add it to the identification routine and become a better OS ...
Is Xandros and Linpus major distributions to you... they are the
leading pre-installed distributions of linux by a wide wide margin if
Who cares? If they are leading distributions, someone will have a installation of them and might be able to check how they can be identified. If not, they are unkown distributions, that's also fine, the main thing is they are detected and added to the GRUB menu after installation.
you believe the press reports. How do we identify those accurately?
This is not necessary. It is necessary to add an entry for those distributions to GRUB during installation. If they are identified by a correct name or by unkown distribution is completly unimportant. If someone on the list has an installation of this distribution he might contribute the relevant information.
Regards, Thomas
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