diff --git a/images/screenshot/boot-grub.png b/images/screenshot/boot-grub.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2716de Binary files /dev/null and b/images/screenshot/boot-grub.png differ diff --git a/images/screenshot/boot-systemdboot.png b/images/screenshot/boot-systemdboot.png new file mode 100644 index 0000000..56ed672 Binary files /dev/null and b/images/screenshot/boot-systemdboot.png differ diff --git a/system-booting.adoc b/system-booting.adoc index af5b767..bdbac1f 100644 --- a/system-booting.adoc +++ b/system-booting.adoc @@ -178,7 +178,7 @@ Partitions (ESPs) after a manual kernel addition or removal from above. Determine which Bootloader is Used ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -[thumbnail="screenshot/boot-grub.png", float="left"] +[thumbnail="boot-grub.png", float="left"] The simplest and most reliable way to determine which bootloader is used, is to watch the boot process of the {pmg} node. @@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ watch the boot process of the {pmg} node. You will either see the blue box of GRUB or the simple black on white `systemd-boot`. -[thumbnail="screenshot/boot-systemdboot.png"] +[thumbnail="boot-systemdboot.png"] Determining the bootloader from a running system might not be 100% accurate. The safest way is to run the following command: