* Charles Steinkuehler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005:03:16:06:15:09-0600] scribed:
> Michael D Schleif wrote:
<snip />

> | [1] What is initrd.lrp?
> |
> |     When I dissect bootdisk.bin, I get this:
> |
> |       # ls -al
> |       total 1052
> |       drwxr-sr-x  2 mds  mds    4096 Mar 15 17:03 .
> |       drwxr-sr-x  4 mds  mds    4096 Mar 15 15:36 ..
> |       -rwxr--r--  1 root root 506328 Mar 23  2004 initrd.lrp
> |       -r-xr--r--  1 root root   6920 Oct 11  2001 ldlinux.sys
> |       -rwxr--r--  1 root root    776 Mar 12  2004 leaf.cfg
> |       -rwxr--r--  1 root root 529079 Feb 23  2004 linux
> |       -rwxr--r--  1 root root    272 Mar 10  2004 syslinux.cfg
> |       -rwxr--r--  1 root root   1058 Feb 24  2004 syslinux.dpy
> |
> |     Unfortunately, initrd.lrp appears to be nearly 1/2-MB in size; but,
> |     is devoid of content ?!?!  This returns *nothing*:
> |
> |       # sudo tar tvfz initrd.lrp
> 
> The initrd.lrp is a 'traditional' linux initial ramdisk: a gzipped
> filesystem image.  Unzip it and mount it with a loopback device.

So, in the default condition (e.g., Bering-CD ISO) initrd.lrp is
*empty*?  I have mounted it, and I do not find anything there.

What am I missing?

-- 
Best Regards,

mds
mds resource
877.596.8237
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Dare to fix things before they break . . .
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Our capacity for understanding is inversely proportional to how much
we think we know.  The more I know, the more I know I don't know . . .
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