On Wed, Jun 15, 2005 at 01:11:44PM +0100, Mark Williamson wrote:
> You don't need a grub.conf in the guest but in the -unstable tree you can
> create one in the guest filesystem and get a bootloader prompt when you start
> the domain. In this case, the guest kernel will need to be *inside* the
> guest filesystem for the bootloader to find it.
>
> I'm not sure but there may be some config options required to enable the guest
> bootloader.
Does the above imply that in -unstable, users can provide their own
kernels?
> You don't need a grub.conf in the guest but in the -unstable tree you can
> create one in the guest filesystem and get a bootloader prompt when you start
> the domain. In this case, the guest kernel will need to be *inside* the
> guest filesystem for the bootloader to find it.
>
> I'm not sure but there may be some config options required to enable the guest
> bootloader.
Does the above imply that in -unstable, users can provide their own
kernels?