GRUB2 is the latest version of GNU GRUB, the GRand Unified Bootloader. A bootloader is the first software program that runs when a computer starts. It is responsible for loading and transferring control to the operating system kernel. In Fedora, the kernel is Linux. The kernel then initializes the rest of the operating system.
GRUB2 is the follower of the previous version GRUB (version 0.9x). The original version is available under the name GRUB Legacy.
Since Fedora 16, GRUB2 has been the default bootloader on x86 BIOS systems. For upgrades of BIOS systems, the default is also to install GRUB2, but you can opt to skip bootloader configuration entirely.
Installing GRUB2 on a BIOS system
Normally, GRUB2 will be installed and set up by the installer, Anaconda, during the installation process. You will probably never have to deal with manual installation of GRUB2. However, in certain situations , you will want to install GRUB2 manually, especially if you need to repair the existing GRUB2 installation or you want to change its configuration.
This procedure shows the steps to install GRUB2 on your Master Boot Record (MBR) of your primary hard disk.
Before you start:
-
Make sure you have the the GRUB2 packages and the
os-prober
package installed in your system:$ dnf list installed | grep grub
-
To automatically collect information about your disks and operating systems installed on them, the
os-prober
package needs to be installed on your system.
-
Create a configuration file for GRUB2.
$ sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
-
List block devices available on the system.
$ lsblk
-
Identify the primary hard disk. Usually, it is the
sda
device. -
Install GRUB2 in the MBR of the primary hard disk.
$ sudo grub2-install /dev/sda
-
Reboot your computer to boot with the newly installed bootloader.
-
The
grub2-mkconfig
command creates a new configuration based on the currently running system. It collects information from the/boot
partition (or directory), from the/etc/default/grub
file, and the customizable scripts in/etc/grub.d/
. -
The configuration format is changing with time, and a new configuration file can become slightly incompatible with the older versions of the bootloader. Always run
grub2-install
before you create the configuration file withgrub2-mkconfig
. -
In Fedora, it is generally safe to edit
/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
manually. Grubby in Fedora patches the configuration when a kernel update is performed and will try to not make any other changes than what is necessary. Manual changes can be overwritten withgrub2-mkconfig
when the system gets upgraded with Anaconda. Customizations placed in/etc/grub.d/40_custom
or/boot/grub2/custom.cfg
files will survive running thegrub2-mkconfig
command.
Installing GRUB2 on a UEFI system
Normally, GRUB2 will be installed and set up by the installer, Anaconda, during the installation process. You will probably never have to deal with manual installation of GRUB2. However, in certain situations , you will want to install GRUB2 manually, especially if you need to repair the existing GRUB2 installation or you want to change its configuration.
This procedure shows the steps to install GRUB2 on a UEFI system on Fedora 18 or newer. The procedure consists of four parts.
Creating an EFI System Partition
The UEFI firmware requires to boot from an EFI System Partition on a disk with a GPT label. To create such a partition:
-
List available block devices to find a place to create your ESP.
$ lsblk
-
Create at least a 128 MiB disk partition using a GPT label on the primary hard disk.
$ sudo gdisk /dev/sda
For the sake of this procedure, we assume that the created partition is recognized as
/dev/sda1
. -
Format the partition with the FAT32 file system.
$ sudo mkfs.vfat /dev/sda1
-
Create the
/boot/efi
directory as a mount point for the new partition.$ sudo mkdir /boot/efi
-
Mount the partition to the
/boot/efi
mount point.$ sudo mount /dev/sda1 /boot/efi
-
Proceed to the next part.
Install the bootloader files
In order to use GRUB2 with on the UEFI systems, you need to install or re-install appropriate packages:
-
Re-install the necessary packages.
dnf reinstall grub2-efi grub2-efi-modules shim
-
If the above command ends with an error, install the packages.
dnf install grub2-efi grub2-efi-modules shim
-
This installs the signed shim and the GRUB2 binary.
Create a GRUB2 configuration
If you already have a working GRUB2 EFI configuration file, you do not need to do anything else.
Otherwise, create the configuration file using the grub2-mkconfig
command.
$ sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grub.cfg
-
Under EFI, GRUB2 looks for its configuration in
/boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grub.cfg
. -
For newly installed kernels to work,
grubby
expects/etc/grub2-efi.cfg
to be a symlink to the real grub.cfg (for example/boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grub.cfg
).
Solving problems with UEFI bootloader
When you power on your system, your firmware will look for EFI variables that tell it how to boot. On running systems, which have booted into the EFI mode and their EFI runtime services are working correctly, you can configure your boot menu with efibootmgr
.
If not, shim
can help you bootstrap. The EFI program
/boot/efi/EFI/BOOT/fallback.efi
will look for files called BOOT.CSV
in your ESP and will add boot entries corresponding to them. The shim
command
provides its own BOOT.CSV
file that will add an entry for grub2-efi
.
During the boot process, you can use the EFI Shell to invoke the fallback.efi
profile to boot the system:
-
Enter the boot partition.
> fs0:
-
Navigate into the
EFI\BOOT
directory.> cd EFI\BOOT
-
Invoke the
fallback.efi
profile.> fallback.efi
-
If you have no boot entries at all, then just booting off your disk in UEFI mode should automatically invoke
/boot/efi/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI
, which will, in turn, invokefallback.efi
. -
If you already have incorrect boot entries, you’ll either need to delete them or to modify
BOOT.CSV
to create new entries with different names.
Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu
Normally, GRUB2 is preset to boot multiple operating systems during the Fedora installation process. If you can, it is advisable to install non-Linux operating systems first. Then, during the installation process, all those operating systems and their locations will be discovered and properly set.
Adding other records into the GRUB2 menu only means to run grub2-mkconfig
command to regenerate the configuration files. During this process, all operating systems known to the system will be added into the configuration. By reinstalling GRUB2 into the MBR, this configuration will be used for further boots.
-
Make sure that the operating systems are on disks, connected to the system.
-
You have the
os-prober
package installed.
-
Recreate the GRUB2 configuration file.
$ sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
-
Install GRUB2 into the MBR of your primary hard disk.
$ sudo grub2-install /dev/sda
-
The
grub2-mkconfig
command will add entries for all operating systems it can find. -
When problems appear, see the GRUB manual to solve issues with booting secondary operating systems.
Setting default entry for GRUB2
Since grub2-mkconfig
(and os-prober) cannot estimate which operating system, of those it finds, is to be marked as default, we usually are unable to predict the order of
the entries in /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
. To change the default layout, we need to set the default based on the name
or title
.
-
Open
/etc/default/grub
and make sure these lines exist in the file.GRUB_DEFAULT=saved GRUB_SAVEDEFAULT=false
-
If you needed to change the content of the
/etc/default/grub
, apply the changes togrub.cfg
.$ sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
-
List all possible menu entries.
$ sudo grep -P "^menuentry" /boot/grub2/grub.cfg | cut -d "'" -f2
-
Select one of the displayed options and use it as an argument to set the default menu entry.
$ sudo grub2-set-default <menuentry>
-
Verify the default menu entry
$ sudo grub2-editenv list
-
Regenerate the GRUB2 configuration file and reinstall the bootloader into the MBR, as described in Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu.
If you understand the risks involved, you can manually modify the
/boot/grub2/grub.cfg
file. In that case, set the number of the default operating system using the set default
variable.
For example:
set default="5"
Note
|
If you edit the configuration file manually, the settings will be overwritten each time the |
Restoring the bootloader using the Live disk.
Sometimes, especially after a secondary operating systems has been installed, the master boot record gets damaged which then prevents the original Linux system from booting.
If this happens, it is necessary to reinstall GRUB2 to recreate the original settings. The process not only discovers all installed operating systems, but usually adds them to the GRUB2 configuration files, so they will all become bootable by GRUB2.
-
Get the Fedora Live ISO from getfedora.org.
-
Prepare a bootable device using the downloaded ISO, either a CD or a USB.
-
Boot the Fedora live system from the bootable device you have created.
-
Open the terminal.
-
Examine the partition layout and identify the
boot
and theroot
partition.$ sudo fdisk -l
If you are using the default Fedora layout, there will be one
/dev/sda1
partition that holds the/boot
directory and one/dev/mapper/fedora-root
that holds the root file system. -
Create the mount point for the root partition.
$ sudo mkdir -p /mnt/root
-
Mount the root partition on the mount point.
$ sudo mount /dev/mapper/fedora-root /mnt/root
-
Mount the boot partition in the
boot
directory of the filesystem that you have mounted in the previous step.$ sudo mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/root/boot/
-
Mount system processes and devices into the root filesystem in
/mnt/root
.$ sudo mount -o bind /dev /mnt/root/dev $ sudo mount -o bind /proc /mnt/root/proc $ sudo mount -o bind /sys /mnt/root/sys $ sudo mount -o bind /run /mnt/root/run
-
Change your filesystem into the one mounted under
/mnt/root
.$ sudo chroot /mnt/root
-
Regenerate the GRUB2 configuration file and reinstall the bootloader into the MBR, as described in Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu.
-
Exit this temporary root filesystem.
$ exit
-
Your bootloader should be now restored. Reboot your computer to boot into your normal system.
$ sudo systemctl reboot
Using the GRUB2 boot prompt
If improperly configured, GRUB2 may fail to load and subsequently drop to a boot prompt. To boot into the system, proceed as follows:
-
Load the XFS and LVM modules
insmod xfs insmod lvm
-
List the drives which GRUB2 sees:
grub2> ls
-
Study the output for the partition table of the
/dev/sda
device. It may look similar to the following example on a dos partition table with three partitons. will look something like this:(hd0) (hd0,msdos3) (hd0,msdos2) (hd0,msdos1)
or similar to this output on a gpt partition table of the
/dev/sda
device with four partitions.(hd0) (hd0,gpt4) (hd0,gpt3) (hd0,gpt2) (hd0,gpt1)
-
Probe each partition of the drive and locate your
vmlinuz
andinitramfs
files.ls (hd0,1)/
The outcome of the previous command will list the files on
/dev/sda1
. If this partition contains the/boot
directory, it will show the full name ofvmlinuz
andinitramfs
. -
Set the root partition.
grub> set root=(hd0,3)
-
Set the desired kernel.
grub> linux (hd0,1)/vmlinuz-3.0.0-1.fc16.i686 root=/dev/sda3 rhgb quiet selinux=0 # NOTE : add other kernel args if you need them # NOTE : change the numbers to match your system
-
Set the desired
initrd
.grub> initrd (hd0,1)/initramfs-3.0.0-1.fc16.i686.img # NOTE : change the numbers to match your system
-
Boot with the selected settings.
grub> boot
-
To restore the bootloader’s functionality, regenerate the GRUB2 configuration file and reinstall the bootloader into the MBR, as described in Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu.
Booting the system using a configuration file on a different partition.
If you end up in GRUB2 boot prompt, it is also possible to boot using a configfile that’s located on another partition, as is often the case with multi-boot systems containing Ubuntu and Fedora. To boot the system using a configuration files on a different partition:
-
Load necessary modules to read the partitions.
insmod part_msdos insmod xfs insmod lvm
-
Set the root partition.
set root='hd0,msdos1'
-
Set the path to the configuration file.
configfile /grub2/grub.cfg
-
The hd0,msdos1 line shows the pertinent boot partition, which holds the
grub.cfg
file. The setting may be different on your system. See also Using the GRUB2 boot prompt for more information.
Setting a password for interactive edit mode
If you wish to protect the GRUB2 interactive edit mode with a password, but allow ordinary users to boot the computer, you have to create a definition file where you set up this functionality:
-
Create the
/etc/grub.d/01_users
file and write the following lines into the file.set superusers="root" export superusers password root <password>
-
Regenerate the GRUB2 configuration file and reinstall the bootloader into the MBR, as described in Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu.
You can encrypt the password by using pbkdf2. Use grub2-mkpasswd-pbkdf2
to encrypt the password, then replace the password line with:
password_pbkdf2 root grub.pbkdf2.sha512.10000.1B4BD9B60DE889A4C50AA9458C4044CBE129C9607B6231783F7E4E7191D8254C0732F4255178E2677BBE27D03186E44815EEFBAD82737D81C87F5D24313DDDE7.E9AEB53A46A16F30735E2558100D8340049A719474AEEE7E3F44C9C5201E2CA82221DCF2A12C39112A701292BF4AA071EB13E5EC8C8C84CC4B1A83304EA10F74
More details can be found at Ubuntu Help: GRUB2 Passwords.
Note
|
Starting from Fedora 21, the |
Dealing with the "Absent Floppy Disk" Error
It has been reported by some users that GRUB2 may fail to install on a partition’s boot sector if the computer’s floppy controller is activated in BIOS without an actual floppy disk drive being present. Such situations resulted in an Absent Floppy Disk error.
To workaround this issue, go into the rescue mode and follow the procedure in Installing GRUB2 on a BIOS system GRUB2, but use the --no-floppy
option with the grub2-install
command.
grub2-install <target device> --no-floppy
Using old graphics modes in bootloader
The terminal device is chosen with GRUB_TERMINAL. For more information, see the Grub manual.
Valid terminal output names depend on the platform, but may include
console
(PC BIOS and EFI consoles), serial
(serial terminal),
gfxterm
(graphics-mode output), ofconsole
(Open Firmware console),
or vga_text
(VGA text output, mainly useful with Coreboot).
The default is to use the platform’s native terminal output.
In Fedora, gfxterm
is the default options. To get the legacy graphics modes:
-
Edit the
/etc/default/grub
file. -
Set the
GRUB_TERMINAL
variable to one of the above mentioned options. -
Regenerate the GRUB2 configuration file and reinstall the bootloader into the MBR, as described in Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu.
Enabling Serial Console in GRUB2
To enable Serial console in grub:
-
Edit the
/etc/default/grub
file. -
Adjust
baudrate
,parity
,bits
, andflow
controls to fit your environment and cables, see the example.GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX='console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200n8' GRUB_TERMINAL=serial GRUB_SERIAL_COMMAND="serial --speed=115200 --unit=0 --word=8 --parity=no --stop=1"
-
Regenerate the GRUB2 configuration file and reinstall the bootloader into the MBR, as described in Adding other operating systems to the GRUB2 menu.
Further Reading
See a typo, something missing or out of date, or anything else which can be improved? Edit this document at https://pagure.io/fedora-docs/quick-docs.