On 1/30/19 11:03 AM, Thomas D Dial wrote:
On Wed, 2019-01-30 at 06:42 -0800, David Christensen wrote:
If you want a portable Debian installation, install Debian on a USB
flash drive. To avoid confusion, install (and update/upgrade) on a
computer with no other drives connected (so that GRUB does not create
boot menu entries for other operating systems). ... >>
I see no reason to take the original drive out for the install.
Note the word "connected" -- when installing Debian, I disconnect any
drives that I don't want the Debian installer to see. I
If you don't, grub will find the OS(s) on it and generally provide correctly for booting them if you wish to do so.
I have one USB flash drive with Debian amd64 and another with Debian
i386. I use them for maintenance/ troubleshooting on many computers
(one at a time). I don't want or need GRUB adding extraneous boot menu
entries.
If the machine is booted without the USB key, it still will boot normally for
the old OS(s). I have found this arrangement quite convenient.
Same for my arrangement, but without the cruft.
David