On Wednesday 25 April 2001 01:47, you babbled something about:
> Edward Dekkers wrote:
> > > I am coming up aon a project that will require building 30 + identical
> > > computers with a whole bunch more to follow I hope. We have a
> > > ksckstart that does everything weneed to set up the box. Is there any
> > > way to clone the CMOS settings from a box with the config we want to
> > > all the others? I don't really know much about cmos memory and how to
> > > address it.
> >
> > DOH!!!! I USED to have a utility that did this. I've just spent some time
> > looking for it but I don't have it any more. Worse than that, I can't
> > remember what it was called. Do a search on the internet - this is where
> > I originally found it.
>
> I did some googling before I wrote the list but now hthat I know it can be
> done I will keep at it. Thanks for the feed back.
>
> BTW was this a linux based tool? I found one that can be used in dos but
> it is for back up ad restore of an single box. The author said that it
> would render another MB usless if you tried to restore a backup of one to
> another. Once I read that I figured there was something going on that I did
> not know about. Of course these will be identical MBs I would attempt this
> on. I wonder if the author was trying to be too careful in telling people
> not to try it from one board to another. I would really like to do this
> via kickstart but if it has to be another step so be it. I am just trying
> to eliminate fat fingers from causing problems down the road :)
>
> Bret
>
If you haven't already found something...
http://www.ibiblio.org/pub/micro/pc-stuff/Linux/system/hardware/bios-cmos-1.0.tar.gz
These are untested so you make your own judgement. ;)
--
Brian Ashe CTO
Dee-Web Software Services, LLC. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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