On Tue, 2025-12-30 at 00:58 +0000, Barry wrote:
I guess I am not sure what a grub submenu is.
What would be an example of one?
On a multi-boot system you could have something like.

Boot  Fedora
       Ubuntu
       Windows

And if you chose one of the linux options, then you'd get to pick which
of their kernels to boot.

I've never seen that on Fedora though, only on other distros.  On
Fedora I've only seen a flat menu.

Boot Fedora <newest kernel number>
      Fedora <next newest kernel number>
      Fedora <oldest kernal number>
      Windows

Hi Tim,
    The main difference with the sub-menus, if I assume your first menu example is all sub-menus, is in front of the "Fedora" entry you get an entry for the latest Fedora kernel to boot from, and the "Windows" entry is not a sub-menu it is the actual "chain" entry to boot Windows.     If after a kernel install you don't run grub2-mkconfig you will always get flat menus because either the BLSCFG option is active or the menus are built by Grubby which has always ignored the sub-menu option and only built flat menus.

regards,

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