For some reason, my first message got lost. The spam nazi caught it the first time, so I registered, got the confirmation back and resent the message, but I never saw it. So if this is a dup, please excuse me.
I'm installing a new 2.1 Gb drive in place of my 350 Mb. Current set up is the first drive is a 350, and the second is a 1 Gb. The first drive has one dos partition and 3 Linux/Debian parts. I'm going to move the 350 to the second drive position and install the 2.1 in the first, temporarily. Then I want to install a fresh copy of Linux on the 2.1. Just enough pieces to copy the data from the 350 to the 2.1. I'd like to generate a boot disk like the one in the 5 disk set that I used to first install Debian 1.1. I attempted to just do a make zdisk rdev /dev/fd0 /dev/fd0 but when I booted it, it did pause for the root floppy as expected, but it paniced with a VFS unable to mount root on 02:00. So that didn't work. So how do I create a boot disk that I can used in place of the original one? I've got a custom kernel that I'd rather use. Thanks, Jim. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Jim Lynch, System Engineer, SGI/Cray Research, Inc. / ARS: K4GVO Federal Business Systems, Phone: (770) 631-2254, Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Suite 270, 200 Westpark Drive, Peachtree City, GA 30269 -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]