My machine have Vista and on a separate HDD 4-5 Linux-OS's with Grub-2.
At moment, if I want to boot a different Linux as the first, I'm forced to create a separate Grub-partition.
Threfore I'm forced to make much more changes than only Linux let install the bootloader in the own root partition.
But, if Easy-BCD recognize each installed (Grub-2) boot-loader (not the small piece in the MBR), I can choose directly the designated OS avoiding to pass three bootloaders: the first Easy-BCD, the second Grub-partition & at least the Linux-own boot-loader.
The other way around, if I can choose the Linux-Partition, than is possible to give directly a special OS-label & have the list of all OS's in the EAsy-BCD screen/bootloader.
The "only" thing Easy-BCD have to do is a kind of chainloader. I'm not expert in bootloaders, just put the idea here.
What do you mean about it?
At moment, if I want to boot a different Linux as the first, I'm forced to create a separate Grub-partition.
Threfore I'm forced to make much more changes than only Linux let install the bootloader in the own root partition.
But, if Easy-BCD recognize each installed (Grub-2) boot-loader (not the small piece in the MBR), I can choose directly the designated OS avoiding to pass three bootloaders: the first Easy-BCD, the second Grub-partition & at least the Linux-own boot-loader.
The other way around, if I can choose the Linux-Partition, than is possible to give directly a special OS-label & have the list of all OS's in the EAsy-BCD screen/bootloader.
The "only" thing Easy-BCD have to do is a kind of chainloader. I'm not expert in bootloaders, just put the idea here.
What do you mean about it?