On 05/15/2010 05:01 AM, Richard Zidlicky wrote: > On Sat, May 15, 2010 at 09:58:27AM +0200, Alexander Boström wrote: > >> Long story short: There are situations where a grub menu is vital, like >> until you've successfully booted a new kernel. > > of course, and I do not think it is so hard to think of a sensible behaviour. > > After each (semi)automatic change to grub/kernel conf as well as for the very first > boot there should be a timeout as well as visible menu. > Once the kernel did boot with default command line etc it would be safe to set > the timeout to a small value - after asking the user. > > More elaborate solution, there could be two config values - quicktimeout and > safetimout. > After kernel and config changes timeout would be changed to safetimout and once > the kernel booted safely it could be reset to quicktimeout automatically. > > Richard What if a user puts in a timeout - after a successful boot will it stay or be reset to 0. It should never change what the user desires ... you may need a fancier smarter set of rules. Complex rules and grub ..mmm ... somehow I prefer simple and grub ... gene/ -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel