GRUB Legacy

GRUB (GRand Unified Bootloader), also known as GRUB Legacy or GRUB version 1, used to be Gentoo's default bootloader on and  CPUs. GRUB version 2 is a completely reworked and fundamentally different bootloader, and will not be covered in this article.

Emerge
Specifying the  slot ensures that world updates will not install GRUB 2 (which resides in slot  ) unless specified.

Considerations
Hard drive numbering starts from 0. Unlike GRUB2, in GRUB Legacy partition numbering also starts at 0.

Instead of installing GRUB in the MBR, it is possible to install to a partition.

GRUB gets boot information from the BIOS, and can chainload other boot loaders, even if Linux can't see them. An example is a BIOS supported software RAID. When a physical drive is set up as 2 logical drives, the second logical drive starts in the middle of the physical drives. Without dmraid, Linux does not see that second logical drive. But GRUB can chainload Windows on it.

If installing Windows and Linux on a computer with two drives, it may be desirable to install each OS on one of the disks. Before installing, change the boot order in the BIOS. After installation, make the Windows disk the second disk and use GRUB to chainload it. This way, by reinstalling Windows, the MBR of the first disk will not get affected and if GRUB can't boot, it is still possible to boot Windows by changing the boot order in the BIOS.

When chainloading Windows, GRUB needs to know the active Windows partition, which is not always the same as the partition which Windows labels as the startpartition.

USB disks
The key to understand GRUB is to remember, in what environment GRUB is running.

Suppose there are 3 internal SATA disks. A Gentoo is running on them and the goal is to install GRUB now on an external USB hard disk to boot a version of Gentoo, which is installed on the second partition of the USB disk.

The Linux system has the following device names:


 * , and : internal drives
 * : USB disk

The configuration of GRUB, which is read while booting, is stored in. in the same directory is a symlink to.

The kernel and the Linux system of the USB drive is installed in. Following the example, now edit, if the mounted USB partition is on.

When GRUB boots from the USB disk, for GRUB itself it is the first hard disk. It should be written in :

In contrast, the kernel sees the USB disk as, the  kernel parameter has to contain.

Here pass GRUB the names, under which Linux sees it now. First chroot into. Fire up GRUB, passing the root of the USB Linux with

Then tell GRUB to install on the MBR of the USB disk with:

Consequence: To boot the USB disk, regardless of how many disks are installed, there is a requirement of using an initramfs or something else.

If the  parameter doesn't match the actual configuration, all is not lost. It is possible to edit the lines before booting. How this can be done, is explained in Knowledge Base:Adjusting GRUB settings for a single boot session

To get the USB disk boot without initramfs regardless of the number of installed disks, use a GPT partition table and the  kernel parameter as explained in this external link: Mounting root partition by UUID (no initrd needed)

Since kernel 3.8 and newer it is possible to use MBR 32-bit UUID, so it's possible to use a MBR partition table as well.

In this case PARTUUID refer to an MBR partition using the format SSSSSSSS-PP, where SSSSSSSS is a zero-filled hex representation of the 32-bit "NT disk signature", and PP is a zero-filled hex representation of the 1-based partition number.

To get "NT disk signature" one possibility is using fdisk:

The output will be something like, so assuming root partition is , the resulting line will be

More info is available here: Description of PARTUUID feature

Using LABEL or UUID
Kernel boot parameters are  or.

Requires an initramfs.

Refer to Install Gentoo on a bootable USB stick for examples using or syslinux.