-<p>With all versions of rEFInd, you can create manual boot loader stanzas in the <tt>refind.conf</tt> file to identify a Linux kernel and to pass it all the options it needs. This approach is effective and flexible, but it requires editing a single configuration file. If a computer boots two different Linux distributions, and if both were to support rEFInd, problems might arise as each one tries to modify its own rEFInd configuration; or the one that controls rEFInd might set inappropriate options for another distribution. This is a problem that's been a minor annoyance for years under BIOS, since the same potential for poor configuration applies to LILO, GRUB Legacy, and GRUB 2 on BIOS. The most reliable solution there is to chainload one boot loader to another. The same solution is possible under EFI, but rEFInd offers another possibility.</p>
+<p>With all versions of rEFInd, you can create manual boot loader stanzas
+in the <tt>refind.conf</tt> file to identify a Linux kernel and to pass it
+all the options it needs. This approach is effective and flexible, but it
+requires editing a single configuration file for all the OSes you want to
+define in this way. If a computer boots two different Linux distributions,
+and if both were to support rEFInd, problems might arise as each one tries
+to modify its own rEFInd configuration; or the one that controls rEFInd
+might set inappropriate options for another distribution. This is a problem
+that's been a minor annoyance for years under BIOS, since the same
+potential for poor configuration applies to LILO, GRUB Legacy, and GRUB 2
+on BIOS. The most reliable solution there is to chainload one boot loader
+to another. The same solution is possible under EFI, but rEFInd offers
+another possibility.</p>