On Sat, 2004-01-03 at 21:48, Jim Cornette wrote:
Also, I was wondering about the pick your installation choices before
you download the installation pieces. Then grab the needed package
groups (modular elements, such as KDE, gnome, sysadmin, games, etc:) and
then generating the final ISO images before download. I'm not sure if
this concept could be automated from the server side or could be
assembled on the client side from some sort of a retriever program.
There's really not a good, sane way to do this unfortunately.
[snip]
This makes sense to me now, since the CDROMs are at hand. It would be
nice though if after the installer found a working hi-speed connection,
if it would present a choice for doing a network install or check for
errata, which might improve the installation. (Out of disk space,
firewire, default up2date retrieval information, etc).
Checking things like this tends to ... annoy people. They think that
you're calling home or something :) Also, "high-speed" is a very vague
term and hard to determine. Plus, as soon as that's done, people start
wanting ISDN and everything else support on boot disks which starts to
get out of hand pretty quick for boot disks. As far as updates, they're
handled in the firstboot process.
>boot.iso is located in the images/ directory and is an
approximately 4
>meg image that you can burn to CD and start an install with. Maybe
>putting it in the isos directory instead of just the tree would help
>raise the visibility here
>
I downloaded and tried the boot.iso from the rawhide image directory. It
detected a NIC presence on both machines that I tried it on. On the
machine with dual 3com ethernet cards, it asked which ethernet card that
I wanted to use. Neither came with an identity. Is kudzu and hwdata part
of the boot.iso?
rawhide is a little busted right now. Now that the holidays are over,
I'll get back to tracking down why :)
I would have found the boot.iso faster, with it being located
alongside
the installation ISOs. I still assumed the images directory was for
floppy images , not CDROM images. Live and learn!
Hmm, okay. It's definitely something to consider. The extra 5 megs
wouldn't really be a huge concern for mirroring, IMHO, and if it makes
things more obvious then it may well be worth it.
Cheers,
Jeremy