Disk Druid - Fedora flame #1
Matthew Saltzman
mjs at ces.clemson.edu
Sun Jan 23 15:30:02 UTC 2005
On Sun, 23 Jan 2005, Jeff Vian wrote:
> On Sat, 2005-01-22 at 21:48 +0000, Timothy Murphy wrote:
>> Les Mikesell wrote:
>>
>>> If you have another Linux machine on the network you can speed
>>> up installs and avoid CD issues by doing an NFS install. Just
>>> download the iso images to a directory on a Linux box that is
>>> exported via NFS and burn only the first disk. Then enter
>>> 'linux askmethod' at the boot prompt, pick NFS as the install
>>> method and fill in the details for the NFS export. The installer
>>> will do all the magic of mounting the images for you. It is faster
>>> than CDs and you don't have to hang around to swap disks.
>>
>> As a matter of interest I tried this ("linux askmethod")
>> but it didn't appear to have any effect.
>> When I reached the choice of method NFS was listed
>> (this is what I wanted to try)
>> but I was unable to choose it -
>> if I did, it simply returned at once to the same choices.
>> (All that I was able to choose was Local CD or Hard disk.)
>>
>> I assume the reason is that I had no IP connection at that moment.
>> In fact I have only one PMCIA slot,
>> and that was occupied by the CD reader.
>>
>> Is it in fact possible to install over the net in this case?
>>
>
> It is physically impossible to do an NFS (or any other kind of network)
> install unless you have a network connection available at boot time.
>
> If you only have one pcmcia slot and are using it for the cdrom then I
> guess not.
This thread has evolved a bunch since I stopped following it closely, but
if I follow what's going on, I think there are two alternatives. Both
involve repartitioning the disk in a separate step.
(1) You can do a hard disk install. You need to partition the disk so
there is a partition you won't reformat (e.g. a separate /home). Then
copy the ISOs to a directory there and boot off the CD. (I vaguely
remember that this was discussed but I don't recall why you couldn't do
it.)
(2) I read somewhere that you could create a partition on the disk and
install the boot.iso image. You could then boot from that hard disk
partition with the network card plugged in and do a network install. Now,
I don't know the details of making it work, but maybe soemone else on the
list does?
If both of these alternatives have been considered and rejected, then
sorry to interrupt.
--
Matthew Saltzman
Clemson University Math Sciences
mjs AT clemson DOT edu
http://www.math.clemson.edu/~mjs
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