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On Thursday 04 September 2003 09:57 pm, Gunawan wrote:
> Hi,
> How to create a boot disk for RH9?
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/linux/RHL-9-Manual/install-guide/s1-steps-install-cdrom.html#S2-STEPS-MAKE-DISKS
- --
- -Michael
pgp key:
On Thursday 04 September 2003 20:57, Gunawan wrote:
> Hi,
> How to create a boot disk for RH9?
> Regards,
> Gunawan
Stick a floppy in and use the utility "mkbootdisk."
See "man mkbootdisk" for the particulars.
Regards, Mike Klinke
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Hi,
How to create a boot disk for RH9?
Regards,
Gunawan
Thanks for the input, it turns out that anaconda takes care of everything
except the "swap" partition definition in /etc/fstab which I modified from
hdc8 to hda8. My problem was that the disk I was adding had another install of
redhat on it and the labels were the same as my original
time?
> Thanks.
i'm not going to guarantee that this will work, but if you're using
GRUB as a boot loader, there is a file /boot/grub/device.map that
you might be able to tweak to specify your boot disk.
on my system, the contents are:
# this device map was generated by anaconda
On redhat 9 I'm currently booting from the secondary IDE first drive (hdc). I
tried adding a drive to the primary IDE first drive (hda). The system booted
but could not attach the swap partition on hdc. I'd like to put my current
drive on the primary IDE first drive (hda) and the additional driv
Thank you! You to!
(Embedded image moved to file: pic09961.gif)
> wat command to type to get to windows 98 if i use the red hat boot disk?
Depends on your boot loader. If you have lilo, check your /etc/lilo.conf
file.
as above.
Cheers,
Loretta
IncrediMail - Email has finally evolved - Click Here
Hi,
I’m trying to create my
own boot disk using the documentation located in « Documentation/initrd.txt ».
I wrote a /linuxrc file that
seems to work…except at the end when it tries to release the open handles
and resources and wants to run /sbin/init.
Here are the two issues I
Hi
How could I make a boot disk ( like the one created during install )
with a i386 kernel on an athlon machine?
I have a hdd and boot floppy which have an athlon kernel and I can't
use it on a pentium 1. I don't know how to make the boot disk with
i386 kernel, not athlon.
thanks!
-
if you run out of space while creating a boot disk is it possibe to span
it or limit the size?
-Dee
steve wrote:
One more thing. If you have an IDE cd-rw remember to add the hdc=ide-scsi to
the "append initrd=initrd.img hdc=ide-scsi root=/dev/hda2" line in the boot
floppy
syslinu
the mkbootdisk tip.
> Here is what I did to make the new boot disk. I ran mkbootdisk in verbose
> mode
> to see what it was doing.First become SU.Then run the command on the
> following
> line.
>
> [root@NTSERVER Steve]# /sbin/mkbootdisk --verbose 2.4.18-19.8.0
> Here is th
Thanks for the mkbootdisk tip.
Here is what I did to make the new boot disk. I ran mkbootdisk in verbose mode
to see what it was doing.First become SU.Then run the command on the following
line.
[root@NTSERVER Steve]# /sbin/mkbootdisk --verbose 2.4.18-19.8.0
Here is the output "
Insert a di
I installed Redhat w/o a boot loader. I made the boot disk and I updated
my box but the new kernel doesnt boot by defualt. How do I make a boot
disk a with the latest kernel as defualt or is it possible to make a
boot disk with boot options.
i.e.:
boot:>
press 1 for kernel xx2
pres
man mkbootdisk
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of M. Schild
Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2002 4:20 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: boot disk
Could anyone explain simply how to make a boot disk, please. I lost my
original one
Maryse
> Sorry !
> mkbootdisk `uname -r`
Thanks
Maryse
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>
> Hi,
>
> mkbootdisk `uname-r`, I guess.
> You can in other way enter directly the version-of-your-kernel.
>
> --
> ism
Sorry !
mkbootdisk `uname -r`
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CTED]
> Objet : boot disk
>
>
> Could anyone explain simply how to make a boot disk, please. I lost my
> original one
> Maryse
>
>
>
> --
> redhat-list mailing list
> unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
> https://listman.redhat.com/m
Could anyone explain simply how to make a boot disk, please. I lost my
original one
Maryse
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unsubscribe mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?subject=unsubscribe
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
, October 30, 2002 3:45 PM
>
> I have 2 Red Hat 7.2 CDs. My old computer just boot
> from the floppy disk. How do I make an installation
> boot disk from these CDs ?
>
> Any input would be appreciate.
>
> Best Regards
>
> TC./
>
---
Outgoing mail is certified Viru
I have 2 Red Hat 7.2 CDs. My old computer just boot
from the floppy disk. How do I make an installation
boot disk from these CDs ?
Any input would be appreciate.
Best Regards
TC./
__
Do you Yahoo!?
HotJobs - Search new jobs daily now
http
> OK, THX :)
>
> But I had to type
> mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 2.4.18-10
>
> Now I have an actual boot disk, which works!
> :-)
> Michael
I never use '--device' and it always writes to fd0.
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On Sun, 22 Sep 2002 16:07:08 +0200
"Michael Pahle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi @ all!
>
> I want to create an actual boot disk.
> My RH-Server works with grub and initrd etc
>
> I don't found a good documentation, to create an aktual boot di
ink
>
> OK, THX :)
>
> But I had to type
> mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 2.4.18-10
>
> Now I have an actual boot disk, which works!
> :-)
> Michael
>
>
>
>
> --
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> unsubscribe
&
From: "linux power" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, September 22, 2002 4:59 PM
> 2.4.18-10
> I think
OK, THX :)
But I had to type
mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 2.4.18-10
Now I have an actual boot disk, which works!
:-)
Michael
2.4.18-10
I think
--- Michael Pahle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> skrev: > From:
"linux power" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Sunday, September 22, 2002 4:30 PM
>
>
> > Try
> > dd if=(/boot/initrd file.img) of=/dev/floppy
> bs=1440k
> >
> > Or this
> > mkbootdisk (kernel ver
From: "linux power" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, September 22, 2002 4:30 PM
> Try
> dd if=(/boot/initrd file.img) of=/dev/floppy bs=1440k
>
> Or this
> mkbootdisk (kernel version ) /dev/floppy
Thx for this tips :-)
Now I have installed 'mkbootdisk' from RedHat-
Try
dd if=(/boot/initrd file.img) of=/dev/floppy bs=1440k
Or this
mkbootdisk (kernel version ) /dev/floppy
--- Michael Pahle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> skrev: > Hi @ all!
>
> I want to create an actual boot disk.
> My RH-Server works with grub and initrd etc
>
&
Hi @ all!
I want to create an actual boot disk.
My RH-Server works with grub and initrd etc
I don't found a good documentation, to create an aktual boot disk.
I don't have an original bootdisk, which usualy will be created by
installation.
All that I tried, don't work :(
The
try to access
/dev/md2 as a root partition.
What you _need_ is a boot disk that not only has a kernel on it, but also a
compressed image of a root filesystem stored further on on the disk. There
are many bootdisk howtos out there that cover such creation, it is well
beyond the scope of this email :)
Unless
Hi All,
I have a RH 72 server for which I would like to create a custom bootdisk
using rdev. The following are the steps I performed:
rdev bzImage /dev/fd0
rdev bzImage 49152
rdev -R bzImage 0
dd if=/boot/bzImage of=/dev/fd0
I need this bootdisk for using Parition Image for Linux, the standard
Title: RE: Cannot create boot disk for 2.4.17-0.16
There is a matching 2.4.17-0.16 directory in /lib/modules.
-Original Message-
From: Mike Burger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, July 02, 2002 3:26 PM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Re: Cannot create boot disk
n Tue, 2 Jul 2002, Hahnel William J wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm trying to create a boot disk for my 2.4.17-0.16 kernel but I'm not
> having any luck. The command being used is:
>
> mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 2.4.17-0.16
>
> I'm getting the message that there is n
Title: Cannot create boot disk for 2.4.17-0.16
Hello,
I'm trying to create a boot disk for my 2.4.17-0.16 kernel but I'm not having any luck. The command being used is:
mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 2.4.17-0.16
I'm getting the message that there is no space left on the
On 06/23/02 17:57 +0200, Anand Buddhdev wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 23, 2002 at 05:45:37PM +0200, Kristian Sørensen wrote:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > I didn't make a boot disk during the installation of RH7.3. How do I
> > make one now?
>
> Use the "mkbootdi
On Sun, Jun 23, 2002 at 05:45:37PM +0200, Kristian Sørensen wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I didn't make a boot disk during the installation of RH7.3. How do I
> make one now?
Use the "mkbootdisk" command. See the man page for usage.
--
Anan
Hello,
I didn't make a boot disk during the installation of RH7.3. How do I
make one now?
Sincerely yours,
Kristian
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On Thursday 09 May 2002 01:58 pm, Henning, Brian wrote:
> Hello-
> I need to make a boot disk that can mount ext2 partitons and that has
> an editor so i can edit files. Can someone point me in the right
> direction so i can learn how to
Brian wrote -
> Hello-
> I need to make a boot disk that can mount ext2 partitons and that
> has an editor so i can edit files. Can someone point me in the right
> direction so i can learn how to create such a boot disk.
Hi, Brian. Do a google search for "Tom's rootbo
This might help you out.
http://lbt.linuxcare.com/index.epl
Linuxcare Bootable Toolbox
-Original Message-
From: Henning, Brian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, May 09, 2002 1:59 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: boot disk with mount and edit support
Hello-
I need to make
Hello-
I need to make a boot disk that can mount ext2 partitons and that has an
editor so i can edit files. Can someone point me in the right direction so i
can learn how to create such a boot disk.
thanks,
brian
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I have a RedHat 7.2 system (Latest Updates) and it currently has the
boot and system on a SCSI disk
The SCSI controller and/or disk is playing up (Locking up the whole
system) so I wish to remove it from the unit all together and just run
with IDE. (I do not need to benefits of SCSI, so it can be
new
> kernel and eventually reboot.
>
> I also failed to make a new boot disk. The machine boots and runs fine
> with the old boot disk. ( I need to boot from disk ). The only problem
> I've seen so far is with mounting devices.
>
> For example, if I now try to make a boot
I stupidly installed a new verion of my kernel on my box using up2date.
I went from 2.4.2-2 to 2.4.9-12. I also removed the old kernel. I
didn't update /etc/lilo.conf, or really do anything but install a new
kernel and eventually reboot.
I also failed to make a new boot disk. The ma
On Sun, 22 Apr 2001, Ted Gervais wrote:
> On Sunday 22 April 2001 09:24 pm, you wrote:
> > Two options:
> >
> > 1) dd if=kernel_image_filename of=/dev/fd0 bs=1440k
> > 2) mkbootdisk --device /dev/fd0 kernel_image_filename
>
> I had tried the first option but it never fully booted up. It seemed to
here are uses for both. Is it worth making one of each? Maybe.. maybe
> not. Always good to have a rescue disk, but on a dual boot system without
> LILO in the MBR, the first option is tastey :)
>
Your version of mkbootdisk must do things different then the version I
have, because t
ot. Always good to have a rescue disk, but on a dual boot system without
> LILO in the MBR, the first option is tastey :)
>
> On Sun, 22 Apr 2001, Ted Gervais wrote:
> > How do I make a boot -disk now that I have RedHat7.1 in place?
> > It failed to make one during the installation
e MBR, the first option is tastey :)
On Sun, 22 Apr 2001, Ted Gervais wrote:
>
> How do I make a boot -disk now that I have RedHat7.1 in place?
> It failed to make one during the installation so now I have only the one from
> RedHat 7.0..
>
> I tried doing a dd if=/boot/vmlinu
On Sun, 22 Apr 2001 19:13:07 -0300 Ted Gervais <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake
unto us:
>
> How do I make a boot -disk now that I have RedHat7.1 in place?
> It failed to make one during the installation so now I have only the one
from
> RedHat 7.0..
>
> I tried doing a dd
How do I make a boot -disk now that I have RedHat7.1 in place?
It failed to make one during the installation so now I have only the one from
RedHat 7.0..
I tried doing a dd if=/boot/vmlinuz if=/dev/fd0 etc etc.
and while that copied that file it seems to need something else.
Should I be
Or there's this.
On Thu, 29 Mar 2001, Charles Galpin wrote:
> man mkbootdisk
>
> On Thu, 29 Mar 2001, Mark Lo (3) wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> >
> > I would like to know how to create a boot disk after the installation
> &g
"cp vmlinuz /dev/fd0" usually works for me.
On Thu, 29 Mar 2001, Mark Lo (3) wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
> I would like to know how to create a boot disk after the installation
> process. Thank you
>
> Mark
>
>
>
>
man mkbootdisk
On Thu, 29 Mar 2001, Mark Lo (3) wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
> I would like to know how to create a boot disk after the installation
> process. Thank you
>
> Mark
charles
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Hi,
I would like to know how to create a boot disk after the installation
process. Thank you
Mark
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2001, Jerry Human wrote:
> I have just reinstalled RH 7.0 but this time it wouldn't creat a boot
> disk. The old boot disk doesn't work. RH is on /dev/hda4, how can I
> start RH to make a boot disk?
Boot to the CD, or install floppy. At the prompt type linux
I have just reinstalled RH 7.0 but this time it wouldn't creat a boot
disk. The old boot disk doesn't work. RH is on /dev/hda4, how can I
start RH to make a boot disk?
Thanks.
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Luke C Gavel wrote:
> On Thu, 19 Oct 2000, Dave Wreski wrote:
>
> >
> > > [root@server:root]# mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0u1722 /mnt/floppy
> > > mount: special device /dev/fd0u1722 does not exist
> >
> > rm -f /dev/fd0u1722
> > cd /dev
> > ./MAKEDEV fd0
> >
> > You will then have /dev/fd0H1772 which y
On Thu, 19 Oct 2000, Dave Wreski wrote:
>
> > [root@server:root]# mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0u1722 /mnt/floppy
> > mount: special device /dev/fd0u1722 does not exist
>
> rm -f /dev/fd0u1722
> cd /dev
> ./MAKEDEV fd0
>
> You will then have /dev/fd0H1772 which you can then use.
>
That is the correc
> [root@server:root]# mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0u1722 /mnt/floppy
> mount: special device /dev/fd0u1722 does not exist
rm -f /dev/fd0u1722
cd /dev
./MAKEDEV fd0
You will then have /dev/fd0H1772 which you can then use.
dave
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How do I mount a toms root boot (floppy) disk?
His doc says to use /dev/fd0u1722 ... but I get an
error message when I try it. i.e.,
[root@server:root]# mount -t ext2 /dev/fd0u1722 /mnt/floppy
mount: special device /dev/fd0u1722 does not exist
I tried making the /dev file :
touch /dev/fd0u
27/6/00 12:38 PM, John Aldrich a écrit:
> An option would be a combo boot disk (with CD drivers) and a "rescue"
> CDROM. That way, on the old 486's (and other systems that won't boot
> from a CD) you boot off the floppy and load the CD as your "rescue"
boot.
>
> > My opinion, emergency root boot floppy sets are problematic. The boot
> > floppy is no problem. The root floppy is very hard.
>
> Sometimes, you do what you gotta do...
>
An option would be a combo boot disk (with CD drivers) and a "rescue"
CDROM. That way
check out mondo
http://www.microwerks.net/~hugo/index.html
charles
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Gary Nielson wrote:
> Mmm, I just went there and there is nothing to download and the link for
> anonymous ftp
> produces an error. Is there actually something to download yet. I notice
> Linuxcare's Busine
26/6/00 10:55 AM, Steven W. Orr a écrit:
> Your best best bet is the lubbock project stored on sourceforge. It's a
> 50M emergency bootable cd image.
...great, except for those older 486s that don't CD boot.
> My opinion, emergency root boot floppy sets are problematic. The boot
> floppy is no
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Bret Hughes wrote:
> Stephen Liu wrote:
> >
> > Hi Everybody,
> >
> > I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
> > disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
> >
>
> One alternative might be
Stephen Liu wrote:
>
> Hi Everybody,
>
> I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
> disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
>
One alternative might be to use Tom's boot disk for rescue operations.
Totally self-contained and easily us
0, Stephen Liu wrote:
>
> =>Hi Everybody,
> =>
> =>I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
> =>disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
> =>
> =>Thanks in advance.
> =>
> =>B.R.
> =>Stephen
>
> --
,
=>
=>I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
=>disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
=>
=>Thanks in advance.
=>
=>B.R.
=>Stephen
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er, oops
ayup
mkbootdisk
sorry
eric
- Original Message -
From: "John Aldrich" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, June 26, 2000 9:04 AM
Subject: Re: Commands to create a rescue/boot disk
> On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Eric Clover wrote:
>
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Eric Clover wrote:
> bootdisk
> or
> man bootdisk
>
You mean MKbootdisk. :-)
John
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I believe that's mkbootdisk
-->bootdisk
-->or
-->man bootdisk
-->
-->Stephen Liu wrote:
-->>
-->> Hi Everybody,
-->>
-->> I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create
-->a rescue/boot
-->> disk. Could anybody throw me som
On Mon, 26 Jun 2000, Stephen Liu wrote:
> Hi Everybody,
>
> I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
> disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
>
man mkbootdisk. Just remember, you DON'T need to prepend the
"vmlinuz-" stuff to it...
bootdisk
or
man bootdisk
Stephen Liu wrote:
>
> Hi Everybody,
>
> I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
> disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> B.R.
> Stephen
>
> --
> To unsubscribe: m
Hi Everybody,
I just forgot the commands used in Xterm window to create a rescue/boot
disk. Could anybody throw me some light.
Thanks in advance.
B.R.
Stephen
--
To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
as the Subject.
umably I could make a rescue disk,
but I don't see how this could help me.
After a long spiel these are my questions.
In the boot directory there a multiplicity of files vmlinuz, vmlinuz.2.2.5,
2.2.5BOOT etc which one is the right one to use for a boot disk and how do I
do it?
Why does the hdc d
Mailing List
Subject: How to copy boot disk?
Hello,
Can anyone tell us how to make a copy of a linux boot disc.
Ian Paton
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EMAIL PROTECTED]
-Original Message-From:
Ian Paton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>To: Redhat
Mailing List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Date:
Tuesday, December 07, 1999 11:24 AMSubject: How to copy boot
disk?
Hello,Can anyone tell
us how to make a copy of a linux boo
Hello,Can anyone tell us how to make a copy of a linux boot disc. Ian Paton --OCTAL NET SERVICES Tel +61 8 9316 9323--
Hi, all:
I try to install RedHat 4.1 ( I bought the CD two years ago, have not upgrad yet)
to HP pavilion 8275 with HD 8GB. During the installation process, everything
is ok untill it try to install bootloader in the master boot sector or the first
sector
of the partitioned disk or on floppy di
but I don't know where exactly since I
only run Linux here.
At any rate, any time you want to make a boot disk in Linux, you
can do so by first copying the linux kernel over to a floppy, and then
setting the root device on the floppy. The root device is the partition
that you boot linux from; e
We've discussed this many a time so far on this list. Here's a
tutorial I wrote, see if that's your answer:
http://jaeger.morpheus.net/logic/linux/ntldr.html
---
Matt Housh email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
MicroComp
is it possible to create a disk to boot from during installation of
rh5.0? i have NT on my machine now, and i want to install red hat so i
have a dual boot machine. to do this, i need to install red hat, then
boot into linux via floppy, copy the boot image, then boot into nt and
tell the nt boot
is it possible to create a disk to boot from during installation of
rh5.0? i have NT on my machine now, and i want to install red hat so i
have a dual boot machine. to do this, i need to install red hat, then
boot into linux via floppy, copy the boot image, then boot into nt and
tell the nt boot
Thanks to all. I may have to get a newer card.
Gordon
On Thu, 14 May 1998, Rich Shepard wrote:
> At 08:54 PM 5/14/98 -0500, you wrote:
>
> >I changed the jumper to master, but it still won't recognize my cdrom.
> >When you say second hdc connector, do you mean second from the ide card or
> >
At 08:54 PM 5/14/98 -0500, you wrote:
>I changed the jumper to master, but it still won't recognize my cdrom.
>When you say second hdc connector, do you mean second from the ide card or
>second from the end of the cable?
The former. The card probably has two connectors, one is the primary a
I changed the jumper to master, but it still won't recognize my cdrom.
When you say second hdc connector, do you mean second from the ide card or
second from the end of the cable?
On Thu, 14 May 1998, John J. Donohue wrote:
> > Finally got brave enough to load RH5 over RH4.2. I can't past t
> Finally got brave enough to load RH5 over RH4.2. I can't past the cdrom
> list. My cdrom is a NEC CORP. Model cdr-260R. On RH 4.2, it works just
> great
>
> under hdb: NEC CD-ROM.
Try jumpering the drive as master and attaching it to the second IDE
connector (under hdc).
--
PLEASE read
Hello,
Finally got brave enough to load RH5 over RH4.2. I can't past the cdrom
list. My cdrom is a NEC CORP. Model cdr-260R. On RH 4.2, it works just
great
under hdb: NEC CD-ROM.
Thanks.
Gordon
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On 20 Apr, Braden N. McDaniel wrote:
> I have an Intel DK440LX motherboard with an on-board AIC-7895 SCSI
> controller. The boot disk for RH5 (made from the image on the CD) does not
> recognize the controller, and thus I cannot install Linux. Might anyone have
> a custom boot disk t
I have an Intel DK440LX motherboard with an on-board AIC-7895 SCSI
controller. The boot disk for RH5 (made from the image on the CD) does not
recognize the controller, and thus I cannot install Linux. Might anyone have
a custom boot disk that includes the updated driver for this chip?
Prismatic
I made a lilo boot disk. The boot disk works fine. However, when I try to
insert the root disk, and load it into ram, it runs the drive, then just
freezes there. Has anybody had this problem? If so, how did you fix it?
Trenton D. Adams.vcf
Where does it hang up?
What messages do you get?
What hardware are you using?
What version/where did the boot disk come from?
-Sam
On Mon, Mar 16, 1998 at 06:05:15PM -0500, Quandor wrote:
> I am trying to install Linux. The boot disk that comes with it hangs up
> during instal
I am trying to install Linux. The boot disk that comes with it hangs up
during installation. Even when I choose expert mode. What am I supposed to
do?
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