This is not the problem. THe problem is: a user of another distribution will not want to touch Fedora with a ten foot pole pnce he discovers Fedora messe up with his booter setup. And the parttitionner is equally bad. These are two areas a distribution not only in the area of bugs but in the are of design. And Fedora hasn't. On Sun, 05 Jan 2014 07:05:50 -0500 Gene Czarcinski <gczarcinski@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 01/02/2014 05:32 PM, Jean François Martinez wrote: > > I have a nice booter setup and a nice _main_ Linux installation. Last thing I would want is a distribution I am _testing_, that is Fedora 20 forces on me it will be my main installation and forces me to choose between installing Grub on the MBR or not at all. > > > > In addition it didn't detect my other Linux installation so at first boot I was only able to choose between Fedora 20 and Fedora 20. Fortunately running grub-install fixed it (ie this time my other installations were detected). Sort of. First of all because Fedora 20, ie a ditribution I was _testing_ was now the default and second of all because every time I upgrade the kernel of my _main_ distribution I am supposed to reboot on F20 and run grub-install. Great. Nothing I can't fix but your average Ubuntu or Suse user will just cancel installation as soon he notices F20 is going to force itself on his MBR. And if the road is a one way one between Fedora and Ubintu then it is doomed. > > > If your system has multiple disk drives, there is a way to do what you > want to do. That is, have you current (production) installation and > then install Fedora 20 for testing without disturbing your current boot. > > Assuming that you current system has grub2-install /dev/sda, when you > install Fedora 20, tell the install to put the MBR on another disk such > as sdb. Everything will be installed and configured except that the MBR > on /dev/sda will not be touched. > > When you reboot into you current/production system, you need to either > enable (not disable) os-prober or add a definition to > /etc/grub.d/40_custom which will "chainload" the grub.cfg file on your > new/test system. > > This works; I use it. > > Gene > -- > devel mailing list > devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel > Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct -- Jean François Martinez <jfm512@xxxxxxx> -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct