Lines Matching refs:booting
100 designed to address the complexity of booting a personal computer; both
111 When booting with GRUB, you can use either a command-line interface
178 * Backward compatibility for booting FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and
279 Support network booting
623 For booting from a CD-ROM, GRUB uses a special Stage 2 called
900 The booting instruction is exactly the same as for NetBSD (*note
1044 default, and booting the entry for the new kernel saves `0' as the
1060 booting, if there is any error in the boot entry, such that the new
1071 GRUB supports a fallback mechanism of booting one or more other entries
1114 makes sure that GRUB will boot `C' after booting `B'.
1117 itself fails in booting an entry and when `A' or `B' fails in starting
1197 # For booting GNU/Hurd
1205 # For booting GNU/Linux
1211 # For booting Mach (getting kernel from floppy)
1221 rest of the commands and booting.
1223 # For booting FreeBSD
1231 # For booting OS/2
1242 # For booting Windows NT or Windows95
1540 entry for booting an insecure OS like DOS.
1572 This is an essential image used for booting up GRUB. Usually, this
1583 This is the core image of GRUB. It does everything but booting up
1990 Set a timeout, in SEC seconds, before automatically booting the
2152 partition type code. This is useful only when booting DOS or
2462 partition type code. This is useful only when booting DOS or
2762 STAGE2_FILE was installed on, rather than using the booting drive.
2778 *Caution:* Several buggy BIOSes don't pass a booting drive
2779 properly when booting from a hard disk drive. Therefore, you will
2781 resides at the booting drive or not, if you have such a BIOS. We
2976 the BSD drive-type (for booting BSD kernels using their native
3221 8 : Kernel must be loaded before booting
3665 recommend using this program before booting your own kernel by GRUB.