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Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | debian/templates.in | 65 |
1 files changed, 65 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/debian/templates.in b/debian/templates.in new file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec83fe7 --- /dev/null +++ b/debian/templates.in @@ -0,0 +1,65 @@ +Template: grub2/linux_cmdline +Type: string +_Description: Linux command line: + The following Linux command line was extracted from /etc/default/grub or the + `kopt' parameter in GRUB Legacy's menu.lst. Please verify that it is correct, + and modify it if necessary. The command line is allowed to be empty. + +Template: grub2/linux_cmdline_default +Type: string +Default: @DEFAULT_CMDLINE@ +_Description: Linux default command line: + The following string will be used as Linux parameters for the default menu + entry but not for the recovery mode. + +Template: grub2/force_efi_extra_removable +Type: boolean +Default: false +_Description: Force extra installation to the EFI removable media path? + Some EFI-based systems are buggy and do not handle new bootloaders correctly. + If you force an extra installation of GRUB to the EFI removable media path, + this should ensure that this system will boot Debian correctly despite such a + problem. However, it may remove the ability to boot any other operating + systems that also depend on this path. If so, you will need to make sure that + GRUB is configured successfully to be able to boot any other OS installations + correctly. + +Template: grub2/update_nvram +Type: boolean +Default: true +_Description: Update NVRAM variables to automatically boot into Debian? + GRUB can configure your platform's NVRAM variables so that it boots into + Debian automatically when powered on. However, you may prefer to disable + this behavior and avoid changes to your boot configuration. For example, + if your NVRAM variables have been set up such that your system contacts a + PXE server on every boot, this would preserve that behavior. + +Template: grub2/enable_os_prober +Type: boolean +Default: false +_Description: Run os-prober automatically to detect and boot other OSes? + GRUB can use the os-prober tool to attempt to detect other + operating systems on your computer and add them to its list of boot + options automatically. + . + If your computer has multiple operating systems installed, then this + is probably what you want. However, if your computer is a host for + guest OSes installed via LVM or raw disk devices, running os-prober + can cause damage to those guest OSes as it mounts filesystems to look + for things. + +# still unused +Template: grub2/kfreebsd_cmdline +Type: string +_Description: kFreeBSD command line: + The following kFreeBSD command line was extracted from /etc/default/grub or the + `kopt' parameter in GRUB Legacy's menu.lst. Please verify that it is correct, + and modify it if necessary. The command line is allowed to be empty. + +# still unused +Template: grub2/kfreebsd_cmdline_default +Type: string +Default: @DEFAULT_CMDLINE@ +_Description: kFreeBSD default command line: + The following string will be used as kFreeBSD parameters for the default menu + entry but not for the recovery mode. |