Hello Ed Cogburn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, > Kent West wrote: > > > > On Mon, 9 Nov 1998, Robert Cloud wrote: ... > > > If you don't mind I've got another problem. ... > > > I've got all the Linux files on the c: Win98/dos drive.
You need to "mount" them. To do this, you: * create an empty directory under Linux mkdir /dosc * mount the partition mount -t vfat /dev/hda1 /dosc If you aren't happy with the way it works, you can un-mount the partition using: umount /dosc and then do the "mount" again (say, if you need an extra option - I think by default the DOS partition is only readable to root, you might want to change that). When you are happy that it works, you should add a line to /etc/fstab so that it automatically mounts every time you boot up. > > > How do i get to them. They'll appear instead of the empty directory you mounted over. > > > In unix "/" means root directory, will "//" > > > get me to change drives. No - in Unix, using double slashes usually doesn't make any difference. > > > Can I even read the files on the win98/dos partition, or > > > can I copy the files to the Linux root. > > > > Yes, you can get to them. When the installation program asks what method > > you want to use to install the base system (NFS, FTP, CD-ROM, Floppy, or > > Already Mounted Drive are the options I think), select Already Mounted > > Drive; when it asks for the path, enter /dosc/... > Its been a long time since I installed Linux. It might be very > possible to installed from an existing DOS partition, Yes, it's very easy. I've installed mine that way and was very happy with it. > but my suggestion is to create the floppys as spelled out in the > install documentation, and use those instead of trying to install > from a Win95 partition. Hmm, personally I hate floppies. And I haven't had any problems with mounting msdos (I even used umsdos on a vfat filesystem, with only minimal hacking of umssync). Jiri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> We'll know the future has arrived when every mailer transparently quotes lines that begin with "From ", but no-one remembers why.