Am 09. Mar, 2001 schwäzte Kevin Buettner so: > Anyway, I went out searching for a new boot manager and found two of > them. The one that I haven't tried (yet, anyway) is GRUB: > > http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/grub.html > > It is part of the GNU project and is GPL'd. There's been no official > release yet, though development versions are available. Mandrake uses grub. It's pretty cool. Has to understand the filesystem the boot image resides on. I think it does *BSD. It does do ext2 and some m$ filesystems. Don't know about reiser. It's menu driven. Thought RedHat was moving to it as well. Some of debian wants to, but I don't know if they are actually going to start defaulting to grub. > The one that I did install is GAG. See > > http://raster.cibermillennium.com/gageng.htm > > It's a graphical boot manager and was super easy to install and Can it do a text only menu as well? Some of my machines are completely controlled via rs232 connections, so 9600 baud text is a must at boot. > configure. It is able to boot the three OSes that I have installed on > the box and apparently is capable of booting up to six more. It is > also licensed under the GPL. The only (minor) complaint that I have > about it is that the documentation was written by someone whose native > tongue is definitely not English. Still, it was comprehensible, and I > had no problem getting the program to work. The docs is a great way for people to help out Free Software projects. Those of us that aren't programming gurus can still turn in bug fixes, write documentation, etc. If you see a typo in a man page or other documentation let the package maintainer know. Document something that isn't documented and turn it in. Most programmers would love to have that as that's the part they don't want to work on :). ciao, der.hans -- # der.hans@LuftHans.com home.pages.de/~lufthans/ www.YourCompanyHere.net ;-) # When I work, I work hard. When I play, I play hard. # When I sit, I sleep. - Embe Kugler