On 2/26/24 04:57, gentoo-u...@krasauskas.dev wrote:
You could also write a script that keeps all the distros up to date
from within whichever one you're currently booted by mounting
subvolumes to /mnt or wherever, chrooting in and running the update.
To avoid grub not being able to point to a
Since this is a fairly custom task, I would approach it with a custom
solution.
- GPT
- systemd-boot
- One /boot partition
- One BTRFS-on-LUKS partition (formatted using the distro with the
oldest kernel)
- {@root,@home,@var,@srv,@opt}-{distro1,distro2,distro3} subvolumes
- Potentially
On 22/02/2024 19:17, Grant Edwards wrote:
However, the choice to install bootloaders in partitions instead of
the MBR has been removed from most (all?) of the common installers.
This forces me to jump through hoops when installing a new Linux
distro:
File a bug!
If that's true, it basically
For many years, I've used a hard drive on which I have 8-10 Linux
distros installed -- each in a separate (single) partition.
There is also a single swap partition (used by all of the different
Linux installations).
There is also a small partition devoted only to the "master" instance
of Grub
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