On Sun, 31 Jul 2011 11:19:31 -0400 (EDT), Tomas Kral wrote:
>
> Not sure if I am quite in the subject.
>
> But in the old Potato days, the installer always asked to stick in a
> floppy disk to write a new MBR on it. Leaving hard drive untouched.
The maintainer scripts for kernel image packages
2010/4/17 Mauricio Contreras:
> On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:44 AM, Camaleón wrote:
(...)
>> First you have to do is *to know* what hard disk is being booted in
first
>> place by the BIOS ("IDE 80" -windows- or "SATA 500" -lenny-). After
that,
>> put here the results of your findings and we will
-- Forwarded message --
From: Mauricio Contreras
Date: Sat, Apr 17, 2010 at 11:25 AM
Subject: Re: How to recover boot floppy in Lenny
To: Camaleón
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:44 AM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 10:48:10 -0300, Mauricio Contreras wrote:
>
>>
On Fri, 16 Apr 2010 10:48:10 -0300, Mauricio Contreras wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 8:04 AM, Camaleón wrote:
>> You mean there is no sound "after" you login?
>>
>> I fail to see any relation with that fact (no sound) and the bootloader
>> being located in a floppy disk or SuperGrubDisk so I w
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 8:04 AM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Thu, 15 Apr 2010 20:15:12 -0300, Mauricio Contreras wrote:
>
>> I have a dual boot setup and was using Lenny booting GRUB from a floppy.
>> The floppy is busted, now when I use Supergrub to boot there's no sound.
>>
>> Is there any way either I
On Thu, 15 Apr 2010 20:15:12 -0300, Mauricio Contreras wrote:
> I have a dual boot setup and was using Lenny booting GRUB from a floppy.
> The floppy is busted, now when I use Supergrub to boot there's no sound.
>
> Is there any way either I can recreate the boot disk from the system to
> another
I have a dual boot setup and was using Lenny booting GRUB from a
floppy. The floppy is busted, now when I use Supergrub to boot there's
no sound.
Is there any way either I can recreate the boot disk from the system
to another floppy or a new CD? This Lenny install worked wonderfully!
Mauricio Con
On 5/23/05, Bill Marcum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 03:21:31PM +0300, Meni Shapiro wrote:>> Check your /boot dir for an initrd file (usualy initrd. or> something like that)> then edit lilo.conf (usualy /etc/lilo.conf)
> add the following in your specific boot option:> init=>
On Thu, May 19, 2005 at 03:21:31PM +0300, Meni Shapiro wrote:
>
> Check your /boot dir for an initrd file (usualy initrd. or
> something like that)
> then edit lilo.conf (usualy /etc/lilo.conf)
> add the following in your specific boot option:
> init=
> eg:
> init=/boot/initrd.img-2.6.10-5-386
>
On 5/17/05, Alex Polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Maybe you can move them back into the original order?No. I had two drives on the same IDE channel. The Software RAID howtotells me this is a Bad Thing.> If you need an initrd, you will need to install a bootloader like
> GRUB (preferably) or LILO
> Maybe you can move them back into the original order?
No. I had two drives on the same IDE channel. The Software RAID howto
tells me this is a Bad Thing.
> If you need an initrd, you will need to install a bootloader like
> GRUB (preferably) or LILO onto the floppy anyway. I do not see why
> i
t system to boot from RAID I'd like to
> make a boot floppy or boot CD for it.
>
> Could someone please point me to a relevant howto? I've tried googling
> but get swamped with irrelevant results.
Debian From Scratch provides a lot of tools and you can also use it as a
boot/res
iginal order?
> Rather than figure out how to get system to boot from RAID I'd like to
> make a boot floppy or boot CD for it.
If you need an initrd, you will need to install a bootloader like
GRUB (preferably) or LILO onto the floppy anyway. I do not see why
installing GRUB on a flo
My RAID array broke down the other day. Using Knoppix I've managed to
reassemble the array but it won't boot any longer. (Maybe due to the
fact that I've moved the drives around.)
Rather than figure out how to get system to boot from RAID I'd like to
make a boot floppy or bo
Tom Allison wrote:
"SYSLINUX 2.04 2003-04-16 Boot failed"
This was burned from the current boot.img file using the dd command.
BIOS is configured for fdd boot first.
Rebuilt and it works now...
Trying to do a floppy+USB schtick installation...
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
"SYSLINUX 2.04 2003-04-16 Boot failed"
This was burned from the current boot.img file using the dd command.
BIOS is configured for fdd boot first.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
oint. I removed the cd-rom
and cd-rw from the
>> SIIG and attached them back to the secondary onboard ide
and re-enabled it in
>>the BIOS. SIIG detected my new Seagate, the BIOS detected
both CD drives and the
>>Debian woody cd booted but the debian installation didn't
see the
On Wed, Feb 11, 2004 at 04:25:42PM +, Mark wrote:
> Yeah - just been through a very similar battle with an Epox motherboard
> EP-8RDA and a Samsung 80G and a Maxtor 60G drives.
>
> I won't bore you with all the hassles, but in my case (after hours of
> digging), I discovered that the BIOS has
BIOS was defaulting (on an AUTO setting) to CHS, whereas on larger
disks, LBA (or perhaps large?) are appropriate.
I also found that Grub wouldn't start because of the discrepancy
between the BIOSes view of the drives and Grub's own, even when looking
at a boot floppy.
Once I'd set
gs up with L0 L0 L0, etc.
I'm assuming this is a hard drive / bios problem - I've used cfdisk
to eliminate all partitions, started from scratch, and same mproblem.
So I gave up on that and tried to make a boot floppy. But I can't
seem to create an boot floppy that uses the
Hello
Daniel Miller (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> I've a got machine that I've been fighting with to make a usable
> router. Debian Woody installed just dandy - but I cannot get it to
> boot using either LILO or GRUB - I get errors going to stage 1.5 from
> GRUB and LILO usually hangs up with L
L0 L0, etc.
I'm assuming this is a hard drive / bios problem - I've used cfdisk to
eliminate all partitions, started from scratch, and same mproblem.
So I gave up on that and tried to make a boot floppy. But I can't seem
to create an boot floppy that uses the new initrd kernels (and
uming this is a hard drive / bios problem - I've used cfdisk to
eliminate all partitions, started from scratch, and same mproblem.
So I gave up on that and tried to make a boot floppy. But I can't seem
to create an boot floppy that uses the new initrd kernels (and I really
want to us
http://www.acooke.org/andrew/writing/x31.html
Cheers,
Andrew
andrew cooke said:
>
> Hi,
>
> How do I jiggle things (via the second console) so that when the installer
> writes a boot floppy, it actually writes to an image?
>
> I have tried making an image and mountin
Hi,
How do I jiggle things (via the second console) so that when the installer
writes a boot floppy, it actually writes to an image?
I have tried making an image and mounting it via loopback, but the
installer gives the error "dbootstrap[16]: error getting floppy geometry
from /dev/fd0&
On Tue, Aug 19, 2003 at 12:54:47PM +0200, Sylvain Briole wrote:
>
> > I think you should use make bzImage to get a compressed one. I have met
> > the same problem before. But I don't know why.
>
> I have also tried this possibility.
> I quote my original mail :
>
> >> So, I have tried it with ma
Hello jqdkf,
> I think you should use make bzImage to get a compressed one. I have met
> the same problem before. But I don't know why.
I have also tried this possibility.
I quote my original mail :
>> So, I have tried it with make bzImage :
>>
>> [...]
>> Root device is (7, 7)
>> Boot sector 51
On Tue, Aug 19, 2003 at 11:57:41AM +0200, Sylvain Briole wrote:
>
> I have run the compilation like this :
> make dep;make clean;make;make zImage
>
> I obtain :
>
> [...]
> Root device is (7, 7)
> Boot sector 512 bytes.
> Setup is 4804 bytes.
> System is 1450 kB
> System is too big. Try using bz
th r+w
allowances in order to transparently use it like any other Linux system.
It runs very well, but I am used/addicted to Debian/GNU Linux, and I would
like to install this distribution onto this computer.
The only thing I need (at this time) is a modified rescue/boot floppy disk
with a custom k
Hi list
Trying to install debian woody on my old 7200/75. Downloaded files in
binary format. Created the floppy many time with mac/windows XP/linux
but it is allways the same thing:
- When booting with the boot-floppy-hfs.img I see a small picture
with the pinguine (sp?) in front of a monitor
I've been using RH for a couple of years (RH5.2, 6.0, 7.2) and I thought I'd
try Debian 3.0. I did a new install but ran into some weird behaviour (or
at least, stuff I don't understand) so I'm back with RH for now.Sorry if
some of my questions are a bit elementary. And any comparisons w
On Thu, 6 Mar 2003 21:58:41 -0500
"Victor Stan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Now I want to make sure that I use the new one, will your
> instructions or anybody's instructions of doing something with vmlinuz
> going to assure that whatever that command of option or flag
> (whatever) that is going
myself- use the new kernel?
- Vic
-Original Message-
From: Todd Pytel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2003 7:35 PM
To: debuser
Subject: Re: must.. surpress ... murderous rage (simple boot floppy
qveshtion)
On Thu, 6 Mar 2003 11:00:21 -0500
"Victor Stan" <
* Victor Stan ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [Mar 06. 2003 13:52]:
> Actually I WANT something that only does one thing with no options
> whatsoever, as long as it boots my new kernel that is all I care.
If you don't mind using syslinux, something along the lines of:
fdformat /dev/fd0
mkfs -t msdos /dev/fd
On Thu, 6 Mar 2003 11:00:21 -0500
"Victor Stan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Why, doesn't matter (cuz I'm fancy like that), what I want is a simple
> kernel on a floppy that I stick in and boots my Linux machine simple,
> no frills.
OK, easy provided that your kernel has filesystem support for th
Hi,
On Thu, Mar 06, 2003 at 12:57:08PM -0500, Don Hayward wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Mar 2003, Victor Stan wrote:
>
> > Here is what I get if I do mkboot, a lost and found folder and a vmlinuz
> > file. I tried this before, it doesn't work, but in the man it says something
> > about if lilo is in use it
... murderous rage (simple boot floppy
qveshtion)
Victor Stan said:
> Why is Debian so retarded on simple boot floppies??? Red Hat is like:
> makebootdisk And done! WHY WHY WHY?
I think debian 2.2 had the mkbootdisk program. I don't see it in 3.0.
I really didn't like it. Main re
rage (simple boot floppy
qveshtion)
On Thu, 6 Mar 2003, Victor Stan wrote:
> Here is what I get if I do mkboot, a lost and found folder and a vmlinuz
> file. I tried this before, it doesn't work, but in the man it says
something
> about if lilo is in use it des something with l
rward boot disk
that is all.
How exactly, does Debian do it when it installs itself? It asked me if I
want a boot floppy and then it made one simple as that. Why does that
application/script not exist now when everything is in place? OR, here is
another avenue; I already have the old original 2.
Victor Stan said:
> Why is Debian so retarded on simple boot floppies??? Red Hat is like:
> makebootdisk And done! WHY WHY WHY?
I think debian 2.2 had the mkbootdisk program. I don't see it in 3.0.
I really didn't like it. Main reason was that it seemed to use SYSLINUX
and created a boot disk
On Thu, Mar 06, 2003 at 11:00:21AM -0500, Victor Stan wrote:
> Why, doesn't matter (cuz I'm fancy like that), what I want is a simple
> kernel on a floppy that I stick in and boots my Linux machine simple, no
> frills.
mkboot?
--
Colin Watson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ok, so 2 days of RTFM and nothing.
First let me make sure we have it set straight - LILO and GRUB are NOT an
OPTION!
Why, doesn't matter (cuz I'm fancy like that), what I want is a simple
kernel on a floppy that I stick in and boots my Linux machine simple, no
frills.
Found some good tutorials,
You will get a lot of replies telling you about using lilo or grub.
For some reason nobody ever recommends using LOADLIN.EXE. I think they
think it's ideologically unsound. I think it's cool. If it's so
unsound, why is it on my Debian install CD? :-)
I triple-boot Windoze 98, DOS 6.22 and Linux.
by default. Uncomment
it, replace HURD with Win98, set the "other=/dev/hda4" to whatever
your windows boot device is (/dev/hda1 would be my guess based on what
you said in your post). Don't use the restricted and alias lines, or
figure them out ;-)
A few things to remember:
- I b
ubject: new installation -- install lilo after making boot floppy
Date: Tue, 3 Dec 2002 21:16:11 -0700
Hi,
I just installed GNU/Linux using the compact boot floppies onto my
boss's windows 98 computer. He has 2 hard drives, the first, hda
devoted to windows 98, and the second drive hdb devo
to go ahead and make a boot floppy instead of overwriting the
MBR with lilo (if that is the right terminology). I was afraid of
making his machine unbootable with windows 98 and the boot floppy
approach seemed to be the safe route. After making the boot floppy, I
rebooted and finished the install
- Original Message -
From: "Romuald DELAVERGNE" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, September 06, 2002 5:31 PM
Subject: Re: boot floppy?
Le 2002.09.05 09:42, axacheng a écrit :
> Hello List :
>
> How do i make a own boot floppy d
Le 2002.09.05 09:42, axacheng a écrit :
> Hello List :
>
> How do i make a own boot floppy disk that include my SCSI device
> and Network device modules
>
Make your kernel with your SCSI device and Network device (built-in the
kernel, not in modules)
Then:
cat /usr
Hello :
Thanks for ur reply ;-)
i have a 123.img about 2.8M !!!
but 123.img is not support my SCSI and Network device...so that,i just modify this
image file..then burn image file into CD.
In this regard, floppy is not good solution to me.@_@
idea???
> Hello,
>
> If you ca
Hello List :
How do i make a own boot floppy disk that include my SCSI device and Network
device modules
i was found some website about this subject from Google,but there is not useful
instruction to me @_@
Does anyone knows where's website that teach someone make a own
On Sun, 2002-06-30 at 15:57, Matthew Tedder wrote:
>
> What image do I need to put on floppy to make it boot up for installation?
>
> I finally successfully download all 8 Woody CDs but the machine I want to
> test it on is an old one and won't boot off the CD ROM.
>
> I tried the rescue image.
What image do I need to put on floppy to make it boot up for installation?
I finally successfully download all 8 Woody CDs but the machine I want to
test it on is an old one and won't boot off the CD ROM.
I tried the rescue image... It just brought up the previosly installed Potato.
Matthew
Hello,
Success!
I am going to respond to several emails at once here, since they all said very
similar things.
I did repartition the HD as follows:
hda1: 379.98MB, Primary Linux ext2 bootable
hda2: 48.10MB, Primary Linux swap (end of disk)
Upon going through the installation process again, bot
tten it
working, it's now a non-issue.
The CD I'm using is definitely burned, but at the moment that doesn't seem to
be an issue any more.
Yes, correct; it's now a non-issue.
What's the problem again?
The problem at the moment is that I can neither make the hard drive
mal CD-ROM drive.. (I don't know about this, but I
think you can try..)
Good Luck
Ronald
-Original Message-
From: Mark Fickett [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: lunes, 17 de junio de 2002 20:04
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Unable to make Linux bootable from HD or m
I'm going to make 2 replys, to 2 differennt parts of this
email,
On Mon, 2002-06-17 at 13:03, Mark Fickett wrote:
> Hello again,
[big snip]
> My current partition sceme is
> hda1: 379.98MB Primary Linux Swap, bootable
> hda2: 48.10MB Primary Linux ext2, at the end of the disk
Ack You can't b
On Mon, 17 Jun 2002, Mark Fickett wrote:
> hda1: 379.98MB Primary Linux Swap, bootable
> hda2: 48.10MB Primary Linux ext2, END of disk
That doesn't look right to me - you don't boot from a swap partition. I
think you should swap your swap for your ext2 and vice versa!
Patrick
--
Patrick Wisem
rs thing
with LILO can't be the problem.
>> I've now retried: I did everything the same as before, except
>> with the new paritions. When I try "Make Bootable Directly
>> from HD," there is again the LILO failure. When I try "Make
>> boot floppy,&q
long?
>
> I doubt it's whacked; it seems to read perfectly well, and from
> what I can tell was also writing correctly.
That's still part of my earlier "oops".
> I've now retried: I did everything the same as before, except
> with the new paritions. W
Mark Fickett wrote:
I am working on installing Debian 2.2r6 on a Packard Bell
Intel machine, which has a Pheonix BIOS, 23.0MB RAM,
23MB RAM? That's odd. Is 1MB "stolen" for the video adapter?
It seems that the 23MB is just for Extended RAM; it's 24MB total for System,
Extended,
MB _at_the_end_of_the_disk_
>hda1: Primary swap Everything else, and make it bootable...
I've changed that as you recommended.
>Could the floppy drive be whacked after this long?
I doubt it's whacked; it seems to read perfectly well, and from what I can tell
was also writing corre
which it asks to
> either make Linux bootable directly from the hard drive or creat
> a boot floppy, at which point neither works.
>
> When configuring device driver support, I install sbpcd for my
> matsushita CD-ROM drive, and have tried also installing de-floppy,
Are you sure t
Debian 2.2r6 CDs (which I purchased from TuxCDs), which uses
linux 2.2.19. Installation seems to go all in order until I reach the point at
which it asks to either make Linux bootable directly from the hard drive or
creat a boot floppy, at which point neither works.
When configuring device driver
"Henning, Brian" wrote:
> I have a grub boot floopy that has no file system. It just boots into grub.
> I want to be able to put this floppy boot section onto a cd image to burn to
> a cd. I don't really care if the cd image has a file system or not. I just
> want it to boot grub. I am pretty sure
Hello-
I have a grub boot floopy that has no file system. It just boots into grub.
I want to be able to put this floppy boot section onto a cd image to burn to
a cd. I don't really care if the cd image has a file system or not. I just
want it to boot grub. I am pretty sure I need to use dd to pull
On Mon, 6 May 2002, David Smead wrote:
>
> I'm a newbie to Debian, and presently doing more sys admin than I prefer,
> but I've been `computing' since the early 1960s. Documentation has
> improved little since then, but now we have more powerful seach machines.
hi dave
i first programed on an
On Mon, May 06, 2002 at 10:13:29PM -0500, Dan Griswold wrote:
> For apt-cache, I see no obvious refining of the search for someone who
> doesn't already know the name of the package that contains mkboot,
> viz., debianutils.
You may find the search facility on packages.debian.org useful.
Cheers,
ter Tautz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > On Fri, 3 May 2002, David Smead wrote:
> >
> > > Sorry for being so unskilled -
> > >
> > > I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
> > > wasted an ho
Walter Tautz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, 3 May 2002, David Smead wrote:
>
> > Sorry for being so unskilled -
> >
> > I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
> > wasted an hour on google and debian looking for h
On Fri, 3 May 2002, David Smead wrote:
> Sorry for being so unskilled -
>
> I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
> wasted an hour on google and debian looking for how that is done. I.e.
> shove a floppy into the drive and type ENT
#include
David Smead wrote on Fri May 03, 2002 um 07:58:04PM:
> Thanks to everyone who new the mkboot command.
>
> Fortunately the machine boots of the hard drive, but not the floppy I
> made. I get a kernel panic.
Which kernel? For initrd-based, you need an initrd entry in lilo.conf.
> image
On Fri May 03, 2002 at 10:29:58PM -0500, Jamin W.Collins wrote:
> On Fri, 3 May 2002 20:24:11 -0700 (PDT)
> "David Smead" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > My signature takes up 5 lines.
>
> I was referencing the signature of Dave Mallery.
>
> > > On Fri, 3 May 2002 20:36:57 -0600 (MDT)
> > > "da
On Fri, 3 May 2002 20:24:11 -0700 (PDT)
"David Smead" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My signature takes up 5 lines.
I was referencing the signature of Dave Mallery.
> > On Fri, 3 May 2002 20:36:57 -0600 (MDT)
> > "dave mallery" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
^^^
My signature takes up 5 lines.
Should I not replay with the message included?
--
Sincerely,
David Smead
http://www.amplepower.com.
On Fri, 3 May 2002, Jamin W. Collins wrote:
> On Fri, 3 May 2002 20:36:57 -0600 (MDT)
> "dave mallery" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 3 May 2002, David
On Fri, 3 May 2002 20:36:57 -0600 (MDT)
"dave mallery" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, 3 May 2002, David Smead wrote:
>
> mkboot
>
(snip 12 line signature)
Are 12 line signatures really needed when posting to a mailing list?
Especially for 1 line posts?
--
Jamin W. Collins
--
To UNSU
Thanks to everyone who new the mkboot command.
Fortunately the machine boots of the hard drive, but not the floppy I
made. I get a kernel panic.
First it warns about needing a boot=option, then
kernel panic: VFS: unable to mount root fs on 03:02
I mounted the boot floppy and here's
On Fri, 3 May 2002, David Smead wrote:
> Sorry for being so unskilled -
>
> I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
> wasted an hour on google and debian looking for how that is done. I.e.
> shove a floppy into the drive and type
On Fri, May 03, 2002 at 07:05:01PM -0700, David Smead wrote:
> I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
> wasted an hour on google and debian looking for how that is done. I.e.
> shove a floppy into the drive and type ENTER.
Type 'mkbo
David Smead wrote:
> Sorry for being so unskilled -
>
> I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
> wasted an hour on google and debian looking for how that is done. I.e.
> shove a floppy into the drive and type ENTER.
>
mkboot
Sorry for being so unskilled -
I just installed a new kernel and would like to make a boot floppy. I've
wasted an hour on google and debian looking for how that is done. I.e.
shove a floppy into the drive and type ENTER.
--
Sincerely,
David Smead
http://www.amplepower.com.
-
veral folk responded that each of the methods below works to create a
boot floppy. Only it didn't work for me.
I finally figure out that I had a bad floppy drive. It finally got so bad
I couldn't format f disk. I had to replace the drive and cable to make it
work.
David
On Thu, 21 Feb
Ämne: Re: boot floppy for Debian
On Thu, 2002-02-21 at 09:56, Paul Fischer wrote:
> Hi all
> and thanks for all great tips,
>
> my problem:
> I always boot my Debian from floppy,
> also Win2000 is running on the same box,
> trying to create a second boot floppy, just in cas
On Thu, 2002-02-21 at 09:56, Paul Fischer wrote:
> Hi all
> and thanks for all great tips,
>
> my problem:
> I always boot my Debian from floppy,
> also Win2000 is running on the same box,
> trying to create a second boot floppy, just in case
>
Hi all
and thanks for all great tips,
my problem:
I always boot my Debian from floppy,
also Win2000 is running on the same box,
trying to create a second boot floppy, just in case
below is what happening:
marvin
On Wed, Jan 30, 2002 at 05:33:31PM -0500, scook wrote:
> I kept trying, changing to idepci flavor and using different diskettes,
> and finally got one to format without errors.
> Now I am just using lilo on hda and when I give up I
> dd if/boot/boot.0300 of=/dev/hda bs=446 count=1
> (from page 137
existing dos
> > partition. Everything seems to go okay until I try to create a boot
> > disk.
> > I get errors with the format of the floppy (invariably). Dos system has
> > no problems with the drive or media. Any suggestions?
>
> Try other disks? Skip making a boot flo
gt; no problems with the drive or media. Any suggestions?
Try other disks? Skip making a boot floppy? I never actaully made a boot
floppy myself...
- Adam
I am a new user trying to install vanilla potato from an existing dos
partition. Everything seems to go okay until I try to create a boot
disk.
I get errors with the format of the floppy (invariably). Dos system has
no problems with the drive or media. Any suggestions?
tell me?
>
> Thank you!
>
> Kevin Yang
> Information System Dept.
> Hyatt Regency Tianjin
You don't need to use that package. You can download boot floppy images
alrady made right from your Debian mirror.I.E.
http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/dists/woody/main/disks-i386/
Greg Madden
On Thu, Jan 10, 2002 at 11:20:02AM +0800, sina wrote:
> I download the file boot-floppies_2.2.26.deb but I don't know how to use it,
> I want to
> install debian in a notebook from floppy (as the notebook has no CD-ROM) does
> the file I download right? Could you tell me?
.deb are Debian package
Dear engineer:
I download the file boot-floppies_2.2.26.deb but I
don't know how to use it, I want to
install debian in a notebook from floppy (as the
notebook has no CD-ROM) does the file I download right? Could you tell
me?
Thank you!
Kevin YangInformation System Dept.Hyatt
Regency T
>
> - the above and the way you did your dd should always work..
> if not... try a different floppy ... you have to have a 100%
> clean floppy ( no bad tracks/sectors )
>
> you can also use lilo and grub and syslinux to make boot floppies
> ( a better boot floppy.
lo and grub and syslinux to make boot floppies
( a better boot floppy... esp if you need to fix the disks ...
have fun booting..
alvin
On Sun, 23 Dec 2001, David Teague wrote:
> Hi
>
> I tried to use the script mkboot that (if run as user, makes a boot
> disk by dd the kernel to a flop
Hi
I tried to use the script mkboot that (if run as user, makes a boot
disk by dd the kernel to a floppy and then running rdev on the
floppy.) Boot floppy made that way esn't work.
If I do it barehanded
cp kernel /dev/fd0
then
rdev
to set the root and swap doesn't work either.
Hi,
I'm running 2.2.19 as original kernel, and I installed the 2.4.16 kernel
with apt-get. This didn't produce any errors so I assume it went ok.
However, I am using a boot floppy to start up my system, but this floppy
doesn't work now. I choose to make a new boot floppy when the
eed to load the driver from floppy right
after the keyboard config (the driver is dpt_i2o.o). I can then
partition and initialise the hard disk.
But what now?? I end up being asked to create a boot floppy (it
skips asking me to install on the MBR with lilo for some reason). I
create the
hi ya nick
if you wanna boot different kernels.. just add the stanza for each kernel
if you wanna make a boot floppy:
dd that kernel to the floppy ( don't have single user mode )
-or-
lilo to the floppy ( sometimes works and have single user mode )
before pl
ed Debian from CD, and this created a boot floppy
> pretty straightforwardly, which has always worked. However,
> I'd like to recompile the kernel and install it on a new
> floppy.
>
[snip]
Hi
I've been having problems booting Debian from floppy.
The reason I boot from floppy is that I have 2 hard disks on my PC:
Windows lives on the first, and linux on the second, with my root
partition on /dev/sdb1.
I installed Debian from CD, and this created a boot floppy
p
On Sun, Sep 16, 2001 at 02:29:21PM +0530, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Speaking about a Win 95/98 or msdos Boot floppy,
> How can you be sure that there is this 'CD-Rom' support ?
>
> What is the file/EXE/dll that brings about CD-Rom support ?
>
> Please help.
>
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